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Achievements | Honors, appointments, publications for Jan. 12

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Achievements | Honors, appointments, publications for Jan. 12


Recent achievements for the campus community were earned by Majid Al Harthy, Humberto Blanco, Crystal Bock Thiessen, Andrew Brown, Dan Coogan, Amanda Dabney, Aaron Ebrahim, Christian Elowsky, Carrie Fitzwater, Melanie Griffin, Kathryn Holland, Amit Jhala, Valerie Jones, Kaci Jumps, Aidan Linder, Patrice McMahon, Justin McMechan, Phuong Hanh Nguyen, Laila Puntel, Christian Stephenson, the Children’s Justice Clinic, and the College of Engineering.

Honors

  • Humberto Blanco, professor of agronomy and horticulture, has been named a fellow of the American Society of Agronomy Blanco’s contributions and achievements were recognized during the scientific society’s annual meeting in St. Louis, Missouri, on Oct. 30. Fellow is the highest recognition bestowed by the society. Blanco is nationally and internationally recognized for his research on soil ecosystem services of conservation agriculture (such as no-till), cover crops, biochar, crop residue management and energy crops. He has spoken worldwide on these topics.

  • Andrew Brown, assistant director of community engagement for Student Leadership, Involvement and Community Engagement, earned a Kudos award from the University of Nebraska Board of Regents. Brown provides leadership for student-centered community engagement activities and direct service opportunities with local nonprofits in Lincoln and Lancaster County. Brown has led an overall growth of the experiential engagement options for students through development of new programs, expansion of existing programs and enhancement of community partnerships. Read more about Brown’s work with students and the local community.

  • The Children’s Justice Clinic has received the Education Rights Counsel’s Advocacy in Education Award. The award is given to a lawyer or legal entity who advances the education rights of children across Nebraska.

  • Law students Dan Coogan, Amanda Dabney and Kaci Jumps defeated a University of Iowa team to win the Region 9 competition of the New York City Bar Association’s National Moot Court competition. Dabney earned the award for best finalist in the final round. The team will advance to the national competition to be held in New York City Jan. 28-Feb. 2.

  • Four Nebraska Business students won the national supply chain competition at the Specialty Tools and Fasteners Distributors Association conference in San Antonio, Texas. The Nebraska team claimed the championship for the second year in a row. Team members were Majid Al Harthy, junior supply chain major from Muscat, Oman; Aaron Ebrahim, senior accounting major from Lincoln; Aidan Linder, senior supply chain management major from Omaha; and Phuong Hanh Nguyen, senior supply chain management major from Hai Phong, Vietnam.

  • Christian Elowsky and Christian Stephenson, assistant professors of practice in agronomy and horticulture, were each honored recently at an Indigenous Food Sovereignty event. The Indigenous Food Sovereignty Program is sponsored by the University of Nebraska–Lincoln Tribal Extension Office. The program welcomes Indigenous high school students onto East Campus to engage with Indigenous elders and Nebraska Extension faculty to learn how to grow their own food and establish food sovereignty for their families and communities. They meet on Saturday mornings throughout the year.

  • Carrie Fitzwater assistant director of residence life, has been elected to a three-year term for the Upper Midwest Region-Association of College and University Housing Officers, serving as president in 2025. The association is a group for housing and residential life professionals, dedicated to education, research and service for member institutions, with a focus on housing education, research support and fostering a service-oriented community. In her leadership role, Fitzwater aspires to enrich professional development and networking, encourage resource sharing and offer inspirational mentorship, influencing the future of student housing and residence life.

  • Kathryn Holland, associate professor in psychology and the Women’s and Gender Studies program, earned an award for Distinguished Early Career Contributions to Psychology in the Public Interest from the American Psychological Association. This award recognizes people who have advanced psychology as a science and/or profession by a single extraordinary achievement or a lifetime of outstanding contributions in the public interest.

  • Amit Jhala, professor, associate department head and Nebraska Extension weed management specialist in the Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, was honored with an Outstanding Mid-Career Extension Award from the Nebraska Cooperative Extension Association during the annual conference in Kearney on Nov. 15. The association is the statewide umbrella organization that connects local extension personnel to national organizations related to their field of work.

  • Valerie Jones, associate professor of advertising and public relations, was named the Fred A. and Gladys Seaton Professor. Jones previously held the Seaton Professorship from Jan. 1, 2021, to Dec. 31, 2023. The professorship is awarded for a three-year term. Before joining the College of Journalism and Mass Communications in 2013, Jones built a substantial career in media strategy and branding. Her current research primarily explores the influence of digital media on societal behaviors and trends. The Seaton Professorship was established at the University of Nebraska Foundation in 1979 to commemorate the life of Fred A. Seaton, who served as secretary of the interior under President Dwight D. Eisenhower and whose business interests included newspapers and radio stations in Nebraska, Wyoming, South Dakota and Kansas.

  • Justin McMechan and colleagues received the 2023 Outstanding Paper Award in the Agronomy Journal for their article “Abnormal Ear Development in Corn: A Review.”

  • Nebraska Engineering has been recognized as one of the top three 2024 Best Engineering Master’s Programs for Your Money by Money, earning a five-star designation from the magazine. For their inaugural graduate school rankings, Money partnered with College Factual to find the country’s top-value programs — with a focus on annual costs, typical debt burdens, employment rates and recent graduate salaries. Read more.

  • Laila Puntel, assistant professor of agronomy and horticulture, was formally presented with the American Society of Agronomy Early Career Award during the scientific society’s annual meeting in St. Louis, Missouri, on Oct. 30. Puntel has been testing and developing digital agriculture solutions to improve nutrient management. The Early Career Award recognizes individuals who have made an outstanding contribution in agronomy within seven years of completing their final degree — bachelor’s, master’s or doctorate.

Appointments

  • Melanie Griffin, associate professor of libraries, joined University Libraries in August as chair of Archives and Special Collections. The chair serves as the educational and administrative leader of the unit, overseeing its program initiatives and the building, preservation and accessibility of a strong collection representing the history of the university, Great Plains literary and cultural history, and other subject areas. Before coming to Nebraska, Griffin served as the interim associate dean for special collections and as the director of special collections services at the University of Arkansas.

  • Patrice McMahon, director of the Honors Program and professor in the Department of Political Science, was appointed an International Affairs Fellow for Tenured International Relations Scholars, part of the Council on Foreign Relations. Fellows are offered practical experience in foreign policy through a 12-month placement at a United States federal government agency, in Congress or with an international organization.

Publications

  • Crystal Bock Thiessen, graduate student and lecturer in Programs in English as a Second Language and Global Affairs, was invited to be a contributing author to the recently published book “Innovation in University-Based Intensive English Programs,” edited by Jason Litzenberg. Her culminating chapter, “Where to From Here? Continuing to Innovate, Respond and Reform in IEPs,” summarizes and critically evaluates the book’s chapters. This chapter also examines the crucial support IEPs provide to multilingual international students, as well as the future of their survival during a time of precarious existence in higher education.



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Nebraska High School Football Playoffs: Top Teams Advance In Class A

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Nebraska High School Football Playoffs: Top Teams Advance In Class A


Two of the top teams in Nebraska high school football will square off in the semifinals of the Class A state playoffs this week.

Omaha Westside, the No. 1 seed, handled Kearney in the quarterfinals, 35-7, while Millard South dominated Elkhorn South, 48-3. The other A semifinal will pit No. 2 seed Creighton Prep against three-set Papillion-LaVista South.

Tay Tay Jenkins, the star junior running back for Omaha Westside, rushed for 202 yards and three touchdowns in the win over Kearney. Braylen Warren threw for 195 yards with two TD passes to Bryson Williams, who had three receptions for 101 yards.

Jett Thomalla, an Alabama commit, led three opening quarter scoring drives to give Millard South control right off the bat. The senior finished with 301 yards passing and three scores, completing 22 of 37 to seven different receivers.

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Last year, Millard South topped Omaha Westside in the finals, 27-10. Millard South was forced to forfeit a win this past season, likely knocking them down to the No. 4 seed in the playoffs.

Toris Rudd, Isaac Jensen and Dallas Gaius-Anyaegbu each caught TD passes, as Jensen had five for 86 and Gaius-Anyaegbu caught six for 83. Nelson Wheeler added two rushing touchdowns on just five carries, going for 60 yards.

Creighton Prep got by Lincoln East in the quarterfinals, 14-6, while Papillion-LaVista South survived vs. upset-happy Millard North, 36-26. Millard North, the No. 11 seed, had knocked off six-seeded Omaha North to advance.

Angelo Walker had 106 yards rushing and a touchdown to lead Creighton Prep, as Papillion-LaVista South got 281 yards and four scores from senior Logan Arch. 

In other semifinal round games, the B final four will see No. 1 Waverly take on fifth-seed Bennington while No. 2 Gretna East gets rival and 11th-seeded Gretna, who has pulled two consecutive upsets to reach this point.

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In C1, the Top 4 seeds all advanced, as No. 1 Wahoo plays Ashland-Greenwood and Lakeview meets Sidney. C2, meanwhile, will see three of the Top 4 in action, as No. 2 Bishop Neumann plays No. 3 Kearney Catholic while No. 4 Grand Island Central Catholic gets No. 9 Ord.

Ord knocked off top-seed Cedar Catholic in the quarterfinals, 27-21, as junior quarterback Jordan Williams threw for 205 yards and ran for 130 with three total touchdowns.

The D1 semifinals will pit Shelby-Rising City vs. Crofton and Sandy Creek vs. Plainview; D2 has Howells-Dodge vs. St. Mary’s and Central Valley vs. Wynot; and D6 will see Garden County play Stuart along with Red Cloud vs. Southwest.

Millard South, Wahoo, Sandy Creek, Central Valley and Stuart are all looking to defend titles from last year. 



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Is Emmett Johnson’s Career at Nebraska Nearing an End?

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Is Emmett Johnson’s Career at Nebraska Nearing an End?


Emmett Johnson helped lead Nebraska to victory on Saturday night, going for 232 total yards and scoring three touchdowns. With an All-Big Ten season in the cards, could his time as a Cornhusker be coming to a close?

On this week’s After Nebraska Football, Jack Mitchell and Josh Peterson explored the possibility of Johnson heading off to the NFL when this season comes to a close.

Below is a lightly edited transcript of their discussion.

Josh: Sadly, I think I feel pretty good that we are watching the end of the Emmett Johnson Nebraska experience. I think you probably have two games left, depending on what he wants to do for the bowl game. That’s the part that now you start getting kind of sad because the dude has blossomed before our eyes in such a special way this year. And again, he’s getting better over the course of it.

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If I’m him and I’m guessing, knowing what I do about Matt Rhule, he’s told him, “Yeah, you got to go to the next level.” And so you got to chase after that second contract as soon as possible. So I think we’re watching the end of his Husker career. Which is a bummer, but it’s obviously happening for the best reason. It’s because he’s good. 

Jack: I’ll tell you this, if I were him, it’d be the end for me. I’ll tell you that right now. If I were him, there would be no question for so many reasons, Josh. I hadn’t really been thinking about it until John [Bishop], Nate [Rohr]. and I talked through it Friday morning.

Josh: I hadn’t been thinking about it until like two weeks ago! This has totally caught me off guard, man. It really has.

Emmett Johnson has improved across the board in 2025.

Emmett Johnson has improved across the board in 2025 and against UCLA, he put up 200+ yards and scored three touchdowns. / Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Jack: If he’s a top ten running back in the draft and by the way, I’m sure he’s going to continue to climb if he keeps doing this and catching the ball out of the backfield and those sorts of things; if he’s a top ten running back in the draft, it would be really hard not to go. Especially because his stock is [in] a place where you’re afraid it’s never going to be this high again.

Josh: Correct.

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Jack: Because how many times do you have game after game after game like he’s had, right? That’s not a rip on him or saying it’s a fluke. It’s just freaking hard to do that. And that doesn’t even take into account the possibility of an injury.

Josh: Yes, exactly. And like we looked at the Cam Skattebo contract because he was the eighth running back drafted last year. He had like a million guaranteed* and that was all signing bonus. Plus, he got a million dollars this year for his salary. So that’s two [million dollars].

*The official numbers can be found here: $1,073,040 in guarantees, $840,000 salary in 2025.

Running backs in the portal; as much money is being thrown out there in college football these days, a running back is not going for $2 million. So already you are making a whole lot more money in the pros. And then of course the other thing is you are then one year closer to your second contract, which is the one where, if you’re getting off to a good start and you have a good NFL career, that’s where the real money would be made.

Could Emmett Johnson make as much in the portal - or at Nebraska - as he will in the NFL? It's hard to imagine that's possibl

Could Emmett Johnson make as much in the portal – or at Nebraska – as he will in the NFL? It’s hard to imagine that’s possible. / Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Jack: I hope I’m wrong. If it were me, I’d be out. I’d be out and I wouldn’t be transferring either. I’d be going to the pros. [Mel] Kiper had him number eight [on his latest Draft Board]. That would be for reference, Cam Skattebo in last year’s draft. The fourth round is where it falls. John went through a list of them. It was really interesting. Chuba Hubbard was the number eight running back one year. It’ll take a few years, but as you are pointing out, that’s when you get life-changing money, right?

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That was what Kiper had. I’m not a huge draft guy, so I actually hadn’t even looked it up till just the other day because there’s no reason to think about it. But the thing is he’s going to go pro. His stock is gonna rocket. Imagine that was like a national game or a game people really paying attention.

Josh: Jack, let’s see what happens now over the course of the next couple [games]. He’s now rushed for 100-plus in his last three. He’s rushed for more than a hundred in four of his last five. In terms of all-purpose yards, he has hit over 100 all-purpose yards in every game going back to Michigan State. So that’s now six in a row. His worst Power [Four] game this year was 97 yards on 24 total touches against Michigan. So even against Michigan, he got close to 100 all-purpose yards. Every other power game, he’s gotten well past that. And then, of course, yesterday, he finishes with 200-plus yards. And now he has 14 total touchdowns on the year.

Next. Previously: Can Emmett Johnson take The Leap?. Previously: Can Emmett Johnson take The Leap?. dark

Remember coming into the season, you and I liked him, of course. We thought he was really good. All of that was based off of some flashes here and there early in his career, but in particular the last four games [in 2024]. And we had like two questions. One, his durability. Is he gonna be able to touch the ball as much? Because he averaged 20.5 touches in the final four games last year. He’s answered that one obviously with flying colors. He’s getting 30 touches a game.

The other was, he just doesn’t score a lot of touchdowns. [Dante] Dowdell was always a touchdown guy and now he’s got 14 and he’s tied for fourth in the country. He’s answered those questions with flying colors over the course of the whole season, but certainly over the last month.

Jack: Dude, isn’t it crazy that he split time with Dante Dowdell last year?

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Josh: It really is.

Jack: I didn’t even like [it] then. When he wasn’t maybe gonna be getting Heisman votes. I didn’t even like it then, and now I hate that they could not develop him faster.

Josh: But in the end, and this is the other thing that John brought up, he doesn’t have a whole lot of carries on his odometer. That’s the other thing that’s gonna work in his favor when you start looking at the NFL draft. He’s gotten better over the course of his career, but he doesn’t really have a whole lot of carries early on in his career either.

Jack: Third down back, man.

Josh: What a special season for him.

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Emmett Johnson had 96 total yards against Iowa in the 13-10 loss in 2024. Can he put together a better performance later this

Emmett Johnson had 96 total yards against Iowa in the 13-10 loss in 2024. Can he put together a better performance later this month? / Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images

Jack: Yep. It’s been awesome. I need him to stay healthy, but they’re going to have to ride him in the next two games. Think if it’s bad weather in either of these games or something.

Josh: This second off week could not have come at a better time because they’re going to catch Penn State who will have played another game, and they’re probably all caught in their feels. And then Iowa’s Iowa. In a season with two off weeks, getting the second one in week 12, that’s pretty good.

Jack: That guy’s got to be so freaking happy. Everybody does, I’m sure.

But man, can you imagine that Iowa game? Like if he walks on Senior Day and you’re going to have the national spotlight at that time slot pretty much.

Watch the entire postgame show below, including Jack and Josh’s breakdown of TJ Lateef’s first start, the performance by the defense, and a preview of what bowl games Nebraska could be looking at.

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Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.





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HUSKERS Halftime Recap – And Second Half Game Thread!: NEBRASKA 21 UCLA 7

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HUSKERS Halftime Recap – And Second Half Game Thread!: NEBRASKA 21 UCLA 7


So far, two things are happening – 1) UCLA is proceeding almost exactly as expected and 2) We are getting exactly the performance from T.J. Lateef we require as Emmett Johnson remains in beast mode.

I thought we would be able to contain UCLA signal-caller Nico Iamaleava through the air and at the break he has only 64 yards passing. I also thought he would hurt us with his legs and he has – 10 carries for 71 yards. Would you believe me if I told you that is under his sack-adjusted YPC? It is – he averaged 8 YPC coming into this game.

On the Huskers side, I expected Emmett Johnson to carry the water while expecting not a heavy load for Lateef with the hope being he could work a mistake-free short passing game, and use his legs to move the chains here and there.

I love it when a plan comes together.

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Can the Huskers put two halves together? That’s been a challenge against teams not called Akron or HCU. Tonight seems like a perfect place to start.



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