"Alvin Turner has high moments and low moments, but not in a progressive sequence. He takes life as it comes-cynical in one poem, sentimental in the next and thoroughly disgusted in the next. Most people experience life through contrasting emotions." Kloefkorn said the reason there are more poets in Lincoln than short story writers or novelists is simply because fiction is harder to write than poetry. "It's difficult to find sufficient details to flesh out a story," he said. "The fiction writer needs precise smells and voices, and that takes demanding legwork. You need to go back through old newspapers and dredge up detail of the time you're writing about. "You need a basket of information from which to select details," Kloefkorn said. "Most of us, I suspect, aren't willing to do that. Also, there are more outlets for poetry. Everybody can't get into the slick magazines, and that leaves the little literary magazines which don't have enough money or pages for many stories." He said there's no advantage for a writer living in New York or San Francisco instead of Lincoln. "Writing is a state of mind and if a guy believes he can't write in Lincoln then that's a condition of his mind, but it's not the geography that does it," Kloefkorn s said. He believes the midwest is producing its share of fine literary magazines, compared to other sections of the country. He listed Prairie Schooner, South Dakota Review, and the Midwest Quarterly (published in Pittsburgh, Kan.) as comparing favorably with the better southern literary magazines. Saltillo magazine recently received a federal grant from the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines (CCLM), but it won't change the publication's quarterly format, according to general editor Jim Wilson. "We're still going to be a quarterly," said Wilson, a graduate student in English. "But the grant will allow us to put more in each issue. Right now I'm not sure how much money the grant will give us.' Saltillo, which features fiction and poetry by local writers and others as far from Lincoln as New York and Boston, will publish its fourth issue the end of January. Poetry by Ted Kooser and Leroy Scheele will be included. "The quality of Saltillo has improved since our beginning a year ago," said Wilson, "because then we didn't know how to print well. We do all our own work and print on the Bluestem Press, which is owned by several people in the English department. Also, we're selling more subscriptions now and getting more donations." Wilson said Bluestem is actually a club, and always looking for new members. It 1 4 i costs $15 initially and there is a $3 monthly charge, which allows members to use the press to print personal material. He said students who are interested in joining should contact Bob Pierce in the English department, or himself. Wilson agrees with Kloefkorn as to the reason there aren't any major fiction writers living in Lincoln. "Poetry is just a lot easier," he said. "To be a good fiction writer you've got to write for years. After a certain point it's work instead of fun, and since it's not easy to publish fiction a lot of people get discouraged." Wilson has written 2 novels himslef, but he's only planning to send the last one, finished last fall, out for publication. It's called All the Lost Generations end he said he'll send it sometime before Christmas. f il n Poem I know what you are thinking you are thinking I am lucky so far I have gotten this far I am what one might call one of the lucky ones through four lines with nothing happening, the poem undeclared, the weather picture entirely ignored you are saying, see he is trying to make a poem without giving in to anything, no one getting kissed to death, no one failing, no gorilla escaping its cage to be hunted down, and see how far already I have come ' $ and into the second stanza and you are still with me, perhaps there i is some kinship between us you from your small town me from my small town you with your poems me with mine, and perhaps you are saying now it is beginning to dawn on you what sort of trickery this is his poems disclose themselves gradually as dawn comes to the Plains States he has all but adopted, or that his love for words carries him off the page then back again, the real poem taking place somewhere else but is almost a kind of secret between him and the reader how we encourage each other how we complement each other the poem my mirror when I turn to it and yours when you do how we depend on it to discover the common ambition we keep from each other through the separate arguments of our daily lives. Must I say it did I come to say it here is there no other poem I can delay this to this that you must already know how I aspire to enter your life and alter it. 4 Must you go on reading off the pag back into your life and back into, j ' your own poems unchanged as I nV through this, unredeemed? . j by Steve Kadel As the snow fell softly outside his home in Crete Monday evening Greg Kuzma sat in the living room playing with his son Mark and daughter Jackie, and watching the pro football game on television. "I usually don't watch football, but this is a particularly good game," he said. "Besides, the picture's clear tonight." It has been said that Kuzma's long black hair, wire rim glasses and blue jeans give him the look of a hip graduate student, but in fact he is an English professor at UNL. He is also a poet. He and his family moved from Lincoln to Crete in August, and live in a large, two story home near the edge of town. It's quiet in Crete anyway, and Kuzma's home sits well off the road on a sizeable section of land. There are many trees, bare now except for the snow piling in their branches. Inside the house one of the first things a visitor notices are many colorful paintings done by friends and a framed print of Van Gogh's Bedroom at Aries at the bottom of the stairway. Upstairs on a desk in the hallway, almost buried beneath other papers, is a letter that should make Greg Kuzma proud every time he reads it. The letter is from Viking Press in New York and discusses details of his book of poetry that will be published this spring. . "Most of the poems in the book are old ones I wrote between 1967 and 1970," he said. "They're about camping and fishing in the Adirondacks, and are the poems most people in Nebraska knew when I got here. I was called a nature poet then, but I haven't written many like them since." Kuzma has published poems in the New Yorker and Atlantic Monthly, as well as a long list of smaller literary magazines. In addition to teaching poetry writing classes at UNL, he edits and publishes Pebble and the Best Cellar Press pamphlet series. But the Viking book will be his first publication by a commercial press. He expects the first printing to run 3000 copies. "Your first book published by a commercial press should be a glorious thing," he said, "but I have almost an anticlimactic feeling about it all. Most New York publishers see everything as a commodity. At first it seemed all they were interested in was my health, so they might make some more money later on another book." What sort of person is drawn to writing poetry? "All poets are concerned with how each second of their life is different from the last and how sad it is that all these things are left behind," Kuzma said. "Also, they have an inclination to believe that things written down on paper are important." Robert Bly, a Minnesota writer, is an important as any poet in America today, according to Kuzma. "Bly stands for something important, which is listening to yourself --the inner man," he said. "He's against busyness and business." Bly was very influential a few years ago by using solitude, silence and hearing himself talk, Kuzma said. It got poets thinking about the internal things as material. "The San Francisco beat poetry of the fifties was talkie and outgoing, as is the poetry in New York," Kuzma said. "It's wordy, flabby poetry about walking down the street and meeting your friends for lunch. "Bly's trying to do something with those big empty cornfields in Minnesota. He's got a farm there and a guest house behind his own home. A lot of people make pilgrimages there and he lets them stay and write," Kuzma said. In 1968 Bly won the National Book Award for "The Light Around the Body," an anti-war and anti-administration work. Kuzma's own writing productivity has been slowed lately, partly because of the time he has been spending on negotiations with Viking. But also, he said, he may have written so much poetry in the past years that he needs a rest or a new writing form. "It's still an adventure to write poetry," he said, "but I feel I've already written a lot of the easy things out of my own experiences. I've exhausted poems about camping and fishing. "I don't write as much as I used to because there has been interference lately from other interests. I've got a lot of energy that can't go into poems," he said, "so maybe I'll try painting or throwing pots."