TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1969 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA NO. 6 .. .ii.ii .i.n i tfTl -. f-L-r ni ,ni,i m, . n J Indian dancer in regalia participated in the festivities at Spring Creek, S.D., during July 4th weekend. A group of 25 from the University made the 400-mile trip to the reservation. Teachers of deaf learn to use educational media by Lois L. Berger Silence. How wonderful it would be at times. Wonderful, that Is, If those decibels of sound could be turned on or off - at will. Frustrating, when a person wants to hear and cannot. Thirty-one teachers of the deaf are on the University of Nebraska campus for six weeks this summer learning how to better communicate with and instruct those who live in a perpetually silent world. Since 11 of the students are deaf themselves, a sign language artist in terprets the lectures. The workshop seminar, which began June 30 and continues through Aug. 8, Is being conducted by the Midwest Regional Center for the Deaf. The center is headquartered at the University under the direction of Robert Stepp and is concerned with Open registration Enrollment for the second session classes which begin Thursday will "exceed 4,200 students and may go as high as 4,500", according to Frank E. Sorenson, director of the summer sessions. Open registration Is Wednesday. About 1,000 students are expected to register on that day. Permit and fee cards can be picked up at the in formation window in the Administra tion Rulldlng. The registering process will be In the air-conditioned ballroom of the Nebraska Union. Deadline is July 21 Students who expect to graduate at the end of the second summer session, should make application on or before July 21, Shirley Thomsen, assistant registrar announced today. All persons who will receive a bachelor's, master's, doctorate or a teachers certificate must report to Window No. 3 In the Administration Rulldlng. A surprise This unscheduled issue was even a surprise to The Summer Nebraskan. A number of fortuitous circumstances made the blue possible. However, no more unscheduled papers are scheduled for the rest of the summer. The two remaining issues will be distributed July 23 and Aug. 12. On the inside pages ASUN REPORT: ProMent BUI Chaloupka report! oa stu dent government activities during the summer .... page t PERSONALITY POSTER: Save this full -page poster and hang It on the wall or wherever page 3 PSYCHOTHERAPY: A journalism student writes about a health Investment la mental happiness..... page 9 developing materials to aid in the teaching of the deaf and with showing teachers how to use these materials. George Propp, director of the workshop and also an instructor, said that the group Is learning to approach a child through his strengths, which is usually his sight. "We try to achieve a visual literacy that is better than normal to com pensate for the loss of hearing," he said. Tools used to achieve this literacy include photography, television, the overhead projector and basic graphics. "The media, the strategy and the message should match," Propp said. Though he answered questions verbally during the Interview, a sign language Interpreter was needed to direct questions to him because Propp is also deaf. He feels that the workshop course Is "one of the most effective and effi cient courses on campus" because of "the high level of Interaction, the ex tensive resources, a systems ap proach, a great deal of lab work combined with practical experiences, and especially, the highly motivated persons attending." In addition to regular staff members from the center, there are a number of visiting Instructors. Dr. Don Perrln of the University of Southern California and Robert Lennan of the California School for the Deaf in Riverside, Calif., have given a three-screen presentation on instructional technology and a two-day seminar on programmed Instruction. One of the teachers attending the workshop, Eunice DeSoto from Tacoma, Wash., is quite impressed with the program, especially the in teraction with other teachers of the deaf. She Is interested In the availability of new materials such as video tape, making it possible to take pictures which are then on hand and ready for use In the classroom as needed. The making of action cartoons to portray abstract Ideas Impressed her, also. The teachers are being Introduced to commercially produced materials as well as being Instructed In the making of their own. The emphasis it on the latter, however. -4 fee W5VC y3 "TV I0O6 SCENICr SO. DBK. 1906, . ;3.M a i i nu?rrv - I lATA JVIlClflMVA IIOA ?' f ' f ?S I li f i : ? V ' --r.' Z 1 1 p I ., f, , ; llA'wws ine Longhorn Saloon does not allow Indians in its establishment, in both English and the Indian language. (Photosbv Roger Reidal w 25 make About 25 University students, their families and T. E. Beck, an assistant professor of English, and his family, made the 400-mile trip to Spring Creek, S.D., to attend a Sioux powwow over the July 4th weekend. The trip was organized by Mark Dupree, a graduate student in English, who became interested in reservation conditions after spending a week in early June at the Pine Ridge and Rosebud Indian Reserva tions in South Dakota. IN CONJUNCTION WITH the powwow, a tourist boycott of the state was kicked off by Robert Burnett, former chief of the Rosebud Tribal Council. The boycott campaign Is an answer to a statement made by the governor of South Dakota that "there is no discrimination against the American Indian" in his state, according to Dupree. He added that the purpose of the boycott is to call attention to the In dian's plight and to give demonstra tion of Indian power. "Burnette has promised to bring the campaign to Lincoln within the next few weeks," Dupree said. He will be accompanied by a group of Indian dancers, If finances permit. "We will certainly provide the op Law students and athletes get new perspective of police work By Paula Seacrest "You don't know what you'll find when you answer a call." NU law student Gary Giese Is not talking about answering the telephone. He's referring to his summer work as a member of the criminal division of Lincoln's Police Department "You never know . . . " NU athlete Don McGhee another trainee, echos with slightly different words the statement which summer trainees repeat in conversation citing the hid den challenge of their work . . . "You never know." "OVER THE FOURTH of July, calls were most often about Illegal fireworks, but the next one might be a prowler or domestic fight . . . You never know," McGhee says it again. "Being a summer trainee with the Police Department has opened my eyes to the way other people live, act, react," Giese explains. "At the University you live In an Ivory tower. You don't see, for exam ple, youngsters only 12-years-old In trouble or the never-ending cycle of the drunk living a life of drinking, being tossed in the Jug, getting out only to find a way to get drunk again." Last summer McGhee served as a cadet In the program begun by NU's athletic department and the Lincoln police more than 20 years ago. As a cadet his primary responsibilities, were marking cars and issuing park-' Ing tickets. McGhee and Giese although both at the disposal of their professional companion and traveling in a police car, represent different aspects of the program. Enrolled through NU's Athletic Department, McGhee participates in a phase claiming a heritage 10 times older that that to which Giese belongs. rhr i Aunn rW SALOON T.i - ' J 'n w" . w w j r ' trip to reservation portunity for a speech or discussion by Burnette for all of those interested in the Rosebud reservation." DURING THE THREE days that the group from Lincoln spent at the reservation, there was an opportunity to talk with Burnette and ask him questions about reservation life, the federal government's role in it and reservation politics. Burnette is a candidate in the upcoming election for tribal chief on Aug. 28. "A relaxing, free atmosphere caus ed everyone to thoroughly enjoy themselves with touring, climbing or horseback riding," Dupree said. "We just fell in with the Indian people." Individually, group members talked with the Sioux people "in an attempt to gather sentiment," he said. Talking about the unsolved Indian murders which occur occasionally, one elderly man told Dupree,' "Sure these murders happen. But God, our Great Spirit, will take care of us." The man had gone on to say that he "would rather starve on the reservation than live in Alameda, Calif." He had found his former job in California, which paid one dollar an hour plus room and board, con fining. "I SEE HOUSES the same and Philippinos, Germans, Japanese, but Initiated last summer, law student Gary's section of the summer pro gram has him working out of the criminal division of Lincoln's Police 'Department, wearing plain clothes and traveling in an unmarked cruiser while athlete Don wearing a uniform patrols Lincoln in a regular police cruiser. "Assignment to other Police divisions Foot Patrol, Traffic, Motorcycle would deny the op portunity to shadow a professional of ficer because men in these divisions work alone," explains Training Sgt. Gene Armstead. a 6-year veteran on the Lincoln force. Training Capt. Dale Adams adds that "over the summer each trainee experiences duty on all three of the shifts that divide a 24-hour period for the department. This way they're subjected to different kinds of people and human activity varying through the day." Training for the NU students con sists of an orientation session in which the new policemen learn how to be have In certain situations they may encounter, when they can and cannot arrest, and fundamental work with firearms. "WE SPEND more time telling them when they can and can't use their guns than how to use them," Adams says. "While they are with the department, the student-officers perform the same duties as regular police. They are armed and have the same authority and responsibility." . HE NOTES that participants In the trainee program usually finish the summer with a much better opinion of the police force than when they start. The student police find that 90 per cent of police work is public service. Law student Giese notes, "My respect has grown; the police do a tremendous job. I have a new opinion of law enforcement. "Students often think the policeman 's. jiii i. HKlMir j ti ,Kitori ,1, m,,il,ill.ti !.' Tt Ti tii-trilwwM according to the sign written none of my people. So I come back," he told Dupree. This statement represents the close attachment to the land and the tribal unit which is com mon among the Sioux people. Indian singing and dancing in full costumed regalia were part, of the festivities lasting all night Friday, July 4th and continuing Saturday. Each day began with the Sundance a ceremonious ritual of praise. The sounding of the eagle pinion whistle, the dancer with a sage laurel on his head, the four-fold unity marked by stakes of colored flags and an altar consisting of a sage bed, a buffalo head and a peace pipe were memorable characteristics of the morning dance. A highlight of the trip was th traditional piercing ceremony performed during the Sundance on Sunday morning, Pete Catches, a medicine man, made the religious self-sacrifice. Two barbs were inserted into Catches' chest. Pulling back on ropes attached to the barbs and to a cen tralized pole cau.-ed the barbs to be torturously pulled from his flesh. The ceremony has much religious meaning to the Indians, according to Dupree. After the sacrifice, an Indian prayer asked for the safe return of Cathces' grandson, who is serving in Vietnam. is a 'dirty so-and-so' when they get a parking ticket or a party is raided. But there's no ticket quota system and the policemen's job is protecting citizens sometimes at the expense of others. You can't make everyone happy." McGhee finds his uniform attracts youngsters. "Children in my neighborhood seem to be even more friendly. My uniform is a stepping stone to conversation," he says. However, "out of uniform," he notes that campus friends "don't tell me what they used to. They sort of 'clam up.1 Maybe they fear there's some thing about them to expose." . VACATION RELIEF provided by the student policemen gives tangible service to the force. Most members of the regular force are married and like to take vacations in the summer. The student replacements allow the regular force to take their vacations without lowering force strength. In return, the department invests In Its new policemen. What does it amount to beyond training? "Approximately $(500 in salary, mine and theirs, for the two-day training time." Armstead estimates, "plus about $150 for each man's clothing and equipment not including vehicles. "However, the equipment is on hand, standard force supply, and the uniforms have been turned back in by men who've left the force." Adams recalls how a law student trainee had through effort succeeded In apprehending a felon only to have the man released by his attorney's work on an evidence technicality. "The law students learn that things on the street aren't the same as they sound when a client comes Into the office, Armstead said. "An attorney tries for the best thing Computer registers students A No. 2 lead pencil and the com puter have updated the process of registering for courses at the University as far as the ad ministrative end of the process goes. Studentsstill have to decipher the class schedule book before penciling in the appropriate spaces on the mark sense sheets, which are then run through the computer. COMPUTERIZED registering has "worked real well," according to Gerald Bowker, director of registra tion and records. Students who pre registered last April for either the summer sessions or the fall semester were the first to use the new pro cess. "Of the students whose worksheets were processed by the computer, we were able to schedule 70 per cent," Bowker said. ' The national average for a mass process such as this where each in dividual fills out his own mark sense sheet is about 50 per cent on the first try, he added. Registering proceeded at the rate of 600 students an hour with the com puter. This fall's registration was completed in one week, he said. Before, it had taken three or four weeks to pull cards by hand. THE MAIN ADVANTAGE of the computer is that more information about the courses students want and the times that students want to take them is available to the departments. "This has been the first time that we have been able to tell the departments exactly what courses the students wanted and when they want ed them." This enables the departments to cancel unwanted sections of a a particular course snd to add other sections at more favorable times. For example, the English Depart ment was able to add additional sec tions of certain courses to the second summer session's schedule because information about the courses that students wanted was available far enough ahead of time, Bowker said. Students should find their fall class schedules more to their liking. BOWKER'S STAFF ran an analysis of the courses wanted, disregarding 'class limits and alternative courses. Each department received this analysis and was able to make ad justments, if needed in some cases. Besides the Increased speed and ef ficiency, computerized registering is less expensive in the long run, he said. for his client, but most attorneys are realistic," trainee Giese points out. "They'll work for a reduced sentence or lesser charge 'disturbing the peace' rather than 'assault' instead of trying to get a guy off completely unless the evidence is air-tight. "BUT AS FOR TRADING oa loopholes, some do, most don't. If there's been a foul-up from the police, the attorney should find it and use it. They try to take care of their client's rights." In addition to Giese, two other NU senior law students participating la the summer program are: Jim Liv ingston and Mark Sibele. Student trainees supplementing McGhee from the athletic department Include: Carl Ashman, Dan llartman, Joe Buda, Ron Drakulich, and Ken neth Cauble. Summer commencement is tonight More than 400 degrees and certificates and six honorary degrees will be conferred at the University of Nebraska Summer Commencement Exercises at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Pershing Auditorium. Summer commencement exerciscj conclude activities for the first 5-and a-half week session. No commence ment exercises will bo held at tha close of the second session Aug. 22. Those who complete degree re quirements at that time wiU receive their diplomas at tha registrar 'a of Cc. v s I 'A I v. '