The Nebraskan Tuesflay, May 9, 1961 Page 4 Journalism Seniors Tape 'Pen Life9 Documentary By Tom Kotoac A radio documentary on life in the Nebraska State Penitentiary by two seniors in the School of Journalism has been released to IS Ne braska radio stations. Prepared by Dave Malena and Tom McMahon under the direction of John Dooley, di rector of radio and television journalism, the report was heard locally on Radio KFOR Sunday. Their documentary, "City Behind Walls", captures the sounds of the 970 inmates of the Nebraska State Peniten tiary while engaged in Indus- Cow Milking Featured At Dairy Royal During the traditional Dairy Royal Thursday at the Ag campus, a milking contest And a dairy animal fitness contest will be held. According to Ike Anderson, publicity chairman, the milk ing contest will be judged on the amount of milk obtained during a given amount of time. Students in the dairy animal fitness contest will be judged on their ability to fit dairy animals for the show. Coed Cow Milking contest ants are Sally Rist, Rose Marie Bohaty, Marilyn Wil liams, Sarah Muelhaupt, Mary Catherine Sheldon; Rose Ann SaalfeW, Nelson Larsen and Darla Rodenbeck. Dave Elm, Dan Enters, Lar ry Hammond, Gene Groven steia, Rodney Vetted Kirk Peterson, Roy Friesen, John Swoboda, Gary Condon, .Nor man Fiddelke, Eugene Turdy, Dennia DeFrain, Roger Hork, John Lawritson, and Paul Scharff will enter the fitness contest. Poets Plan ! Campus Visit, TX Program American poets W. D. Snod grass and John Frederick Hiias will be guests on the campus this week when they record several half-hour tele vision programs with Karl Shapiro. Snodgrass received the 1959 Pulitzer Prize for poetry for "Heart's Needle", which also received a $1000 Ingram Mer rill Foundation Award. Snod grass is also the author of critical essays on D. H. Law rence and Dostoeviski which have appeared in the New Yorker, Partisan Review and Hudson Review. Nims, who was visiting pro fessor at the University of Madrid last year, has pub lished "The Poems of St. John of the Cross" and "The Know ledge of the Evening." Saodgrass and Nims will meet informally with students and other interested persons at 10 a.m. Thursday, May 1L, in 115 Andrews Hall. On Fri day they wi3 give readings from their own poetry in Love Library auditorium at 11 a.m. Both poets will be present aft the presentation of the 1961 awards in the lone Gardner Roves Poetry Contest and fee Prairie Schooner Fiction Con test at the Faculty Club at 3:39 p-ou on Friday. Ag T Addret CoL V. J. Rawie, profes sor f BsHiiary science, will address the Ag YWCA aad YMCA m eommnntem and its threat to world peace today at 7:1$ p.n. at Ces ser Cfeapel ea Ag campus. The title- of CoL Rawie's address will be "Soviet Strategy for World C -qtest." The meeting will be preceded by a cabinet meet ing at 5 p.m. Wat Aim MRSONAt tails. f Oft SALE TSS ta fcor atocka. OR 7-SA4J APARTMENTS fat Eot-tlM R, 3 ho&Tuom imfara- try, recreation, agriculture, church or study. Warden Maurice Sigler, cit ing the documentary as the finest he has heard in h i s penology career, plans to use the tape as part of his of ficers' training school. A resume of the documen tary follows: Inward Change '"The purpose of imprison ment," Warden Sigler empha sized, "is not to rehabilitate the criminal, but to produce an inward change to help him to prepare to return to the world. We provide the cli mate, the tools and leader ship or encouragement that enable men to improve them selves vocationally and men tally. Thus we make time serve the man, not the man serve time," Sigler continued. Deputy Warden John Green holtz added: "We also deal with the psychopath and the neurotic to whom the future mean little. Unless a m a n changes his moral perspec tive, he will likely commit crimes again." The criminal's arrival was described by Deputy Warden Greenholtz: "For three weeks be stays in a reception center where he is interviewed, where his case history is recorded and stud ied -and where he is briefed on the program of the prison what it expects of him and what he can expect of it. He is then brought before a staff committee which assigns him to the work detail which will serve him most" An inmate begins his day at 5:45 a.m. after bed count. He cleans bis cell, eats and goes to one of the prison's 13 industries to work. Besides a 1300 acre farm, these in dustries consist of a garment factory, a tailor shop, a sheet j metal plant a broom shop, the manufacture of new fur niture and the repair of old, a laundry, a shoe repair shop, a cannery, creamery, bakery and auto shop. An inmate described the cafeteria-style noon meal as "plentiful, usually consisting! of pork or beef steak, ham-j burger, potatoes, fruit, vege table, and lots of salad." I New Method The present plan of enter ing and leaving the cafeteria by tables of four replaces the older method of the prison ers e a 1 1 n g in a group with j their backs to a gun cage in which two guards with a rifle and gas gun watched. j Three chaplains provide voluntary spiritual counseling , for the inmates. "Often a j man shuns church and re--ligion with the comment 1 didn't go on the "outside", so why should I begin here?"' commented one of the chap lains. "We answer, 'Does that mean that if you didnt go to the movies or brush your teeth on the "outside" that you wouldn't begin here?" Sports include basketball and tournament play, minia ture gplf, ping pong, reading, chess and checkers, boxing, handball, tennis and weight lifting, one of the most popu lar. Hobbies as music com position and poetry writing reflect a man's longing for the "outside". A man has the opportunity to shorten his stay by earn ing "good time". He earns two months of "good time each year, five days each month he gets a good con duct report and five days of "good time each month he donates blood, 743 pints being given by the inmates last December. Minimum Sentence Ninty-seven per cent of the citizens will leave on parole or by pardon when they have served the minimum statua- tory time. The State Board of Pardons assists them in finding jobs and housing, a man not being eligible for re lease on parole until he has a job. "The conclusion of their tale." McMahon and Malena caution, "is in the public's hands. If given a chance, these men can become use ful citizens. We must make no automatic judgements, for they were not born in the 'city behind walls . Analyst Bill Progresses By 8-0 Vote A Budget Committee bill to create the post of fiscal an alyst LB709, drew little at tention from supporters or op ponents Monday and was ad vanced to the floor 8-0. No witnesses appeared to testify on the proposal which Budget Chairman Sen. Rich ard Marvel of Hastings says will provide more complete information on the budget needs of state supported in stitutions, such as the Uni versity. Marvel said after the hear ing that his committee does not have time to go into de tail and come up with as much complete information year after year to make bud get decisions. "It is difficult for us to do in five months what a full time person could do in 24 months by working closely with each institution," be said. s S atom, nfilciriur, Utia. aid uumpL tar dsetricfer- Ainita. AnltaMa Sum L 7.w. HE V4T74. Irtracttwa' drvartoc F 8 -. Ihriajr mu mom fit. vn i. u. HOME fO SALE At ca&C kaWL for MM. 4-bedroom frn ID -10M. LOST AND rOUNO Xjux brora iMibar cnvekv tamxem ta buMa of Mief It (ottDd. Maaaa mm to Snarl Aclaaaa. Braa La or eal 422 4"iS J-rWARD! , MF.Lf WANTED CAMS COCSXORS. Jaa Aa. 11. 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I 1 Trier A4A MATTfe OF fPCt, IT PCX. tOU WE'K6 60tM6TO May Breakfast Features YWCA Career Woman Miss Sue Stille, a member of the International Division of the National Board of the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) will be featured speaker at the annu al May Morning Breakfast. The breakfast will be held Sunday at 8 a.m. in the Lu theran stnrtpnt House. Per sons interested in making! reservations for the event! can call the University; YWCA (HE 2-7631 ext. 4292)1 between the hours of 2-3! p.m. The featured speaker, Miss Stille, a graduate of the University is back in the United States after nearly seven years in Uganda, East Africa, where she helped to YWCA that is now reaching women through more than 60 clubs, some as far as 133 miles from Kampala, Associ ation headquarters. Her new assignemt is the first in the United States for 16 years, except for a few months in 1952 when she worked on a special project in Chicago. Miss Stille has served with the YWCA in the Middle East, Egypt, Italy and Germany. Sent to Africa at the re quest of a council of women in Lganda, worked with Miss Stille women of the' country in what she calls "a demonstration of cooperative interracial planning and work in a changing continent." African, Indian and Euro pea women living in Uganda developed together the YWCA clubs which not only serve the main racial groups but also Moslems as well as Christians. According to Miss Stille, the old tribal ways are changing and the African farms to take jobs in the factories of Kampala and oth er cities in Uganda, just as American women did during our industrial revolutions more than one hundred years ago. It is with these young workers, as well as with nurses, teachers, housewives and teenagers that the YWCA is actively concerned. Miss Stille has been a pion eer in the YWCA work in various parts of the world. At the beginning of her Afri can assignment she lived in a mud hut with an open door to millepedes, lizard, ibis and various forms of fauna, na tive to the region. Born in Unionville, Mo., Miss Stille has had graduate courses in group work at Western Reserve College in Cleveland, Ohio. She has traveled widely in this coun try, Europe, the Near East and Mexico. Trailside Museum Opens On July 4 at Ft. Robinson The University's Trailside Museum will be opened at Ft. Robinson, one of the world's most important areas for vertebrate fossils, on July 4, announced Dr. C. Bertrand Schultz. The Trailside Museum, de signed to interpret the natur al history of the Ft. Robin son area, will be housed in the former U.S. Arm theater, leased to the University in 1955 by the U.S. Dept.' of Ag riculture. Work on the Museum has continued since 1955 with all specimens gathered now and work progressing on displays. Dr. Schultz noted that the Museum, and adjunct to the University State Musueum, will be of interest not only to tourists and visitors, but to school children of western Nebraska as well. Summer Time To be open to the public each year from May 15 to Sept. 15, the Museum will fea ture the following exhibits: Geography and geology dis plays will enclude a physio graphic map of the U.S. and western Nebraska, paleogeo graphic maps illustrating he earth in relation to western Nebraska during the past 100 years, and a large geo logic time chart. Dinosaur and marine rep tile fossils will supplement three exhibits to explain the oldest exposed rocks deposit ed during the "Age of the Dinosaurs." The Oligocene or "badlands deposits" displays will show fossil skulls, jaws and skel etal parts of saber-toothed ti gers, three-toed horses, rhin oceroses, camels and oro donts. Photomurals Three six-foot photomurals ! of the Oligocene badlands and :a preparatory table, where field men win prepare iossiis will be exhibited on the stage. The Pine Ridge Miocene de posits will be explained by a "picture window," equipped with telescope to permit vis itors to look out on Pine Ridge; a physiography and geology platt to explain the view; a mounted skeleton of a rhinoceros from the world- famous Agate Springs Fossil Quarry in Sioux County; an articulated camel skeleton from Agate; the . "Devil's Corkscrews," the fossil bur rows of beavers living in Western Nebraska some 16 million years ago; and a large bone slab of some small extinct deer, together with the restoration of these tiny animals. The Pliocene fossils from the area will be represented by a partial skull of a masto dont and a skull of a mam moth from the Pleistocene or "Ice Age." The bones of extinct mam mals and artifacts of early man of the "Ice Age," will be displayed with the story' of the migrations of man and beasts to the Great Plains will be displayed under the balcony. Future exhibits, continued Dr. Schultz, will include a geo logic history of cattle as the bison of the Great Plains and the genetics of domesticated cattle. Native trees and plants will be grown in the areas sur rounding the Museum with typical rock formations also on display. Lloyd Tanner, associate cu rator and field coordinator of the museum, is assisting Dr. Schultz in the planning of the Museum. Ag Junior Leads NU Block, Bridle George Ahlschwede, Ag ool lege junior, has been elected the president of the Block and Bridle Club for the academ ic year 1961-62. Other officers elected to club positions are Daryl Starr, vice-president; Carl ijessen, Ag Exec board rep resentative; Al Jorgensen, secretary; Marvin Daniels, treasurer; Jerald Loseke, his torian and Dave Zimmer, co historian. Faculty adviser for the club will be Vince Arthaud, assistant professor of animal husbandry. Dr. D. B. Hud man, assistant professor of animal husbandry, will be the junior advisor. GRAVES PRINTING CO. Social Stationery Party Invitations Graduation Announcements Hove Groves Print It South of Temple Bldg. HE2-295T A U J ' ' ' w A 'a i LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS! mo! 0 a dr. frooo's thought for TMs dav: Don't let exams upset you. After all, there are worse things 'distemper, hunger, insatiable tbirsU MS V- Oear Dr. f rood: Shouldn't we spend our millions on education instead of a race to the moon? Taxpayer OearDr. - ( Frood: What would you say about a rich father C -who makes his boy exist on a measly . $150 a week allowance? Angered DEAR ANGERED: t would say, "There goes a man I'd like to 40r caU Dad." .,t;?y DEAR TAXPAYER: And let the Communists get all that cheese? V j dmSSst Dear Dr. Frood: A fellow on our campus keeps saying, "Bully,',i.Pip-pip,5 '-Ear, ear, "Sticky wicket." and "Ripping!" What do these things mean? Ptuzkd DEAR PUZZLED: V best '. y,.- Sua a ItrnAfA Ida beatniks. A m Dear Dr. Frood: How can I keep from bawling like a baby when they hand me my diploma? Emotional Mr M 0 ', r . m ti MI 7. DEAR EMOTIONAL: Simply concentrate on twirling your mortarboard tassel a helicopter. Jiw in circles above your head, and pretend you are ''. f ft -4 J0 'Si. Sto- A. Dear Dr. Frood: Whafs the best way to open a pack of Luckiec 'm Rip off the whole top, or tear along one Mr side of the blue sticker? Freihman DEAR FRESHMAN: Rip? Tear? Why, open a pack of Luckies as you would like ta be opened yourself. FROOD REVEALS SECRET: After exhaustive study and research, Dr. Frood claims to have discovered the reason why college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. His solution is that the word "Collegiates" contains precisely the same number of letters as Lucky Strike-a claim no other leading cigarette can make! CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some foifg for a change! trodua qf UntmMUcviixxo-7yiat owaeco- U our middle name U-JS3.