sports sports WEDN SDAY Successful support Scoring explosion April 16,1997 NU women’s gymnast Shelly Bartlett has her sights The NU baseball team beat Hastings College 4-0 set on the NCAA Championships. Bartlett is the and 24-0 Tuesday. NU pitchers combined to al- Ditto nation’s sixth-leading all-arounder. PAGE 7 low only five Bronco hits in two games. PAGE 7 Mostly sunny, high 52. Clear VOL 96 COVERING THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCQLN SINCE 1901 ^ NO. 139 KEN JONES, a corrections officer for the Nebraska State Penitentiary, says the most important aim of his job is to maintain order among the inmates. T • P_ raska prison says his job ns wire By Jim Goodwin Staff Reporter Men have killed to get where Ken Jones is today. Many more have raped, robbed and swindled. The consequential dif ference is that Jones gets to leave at the end of his day. The others — the inmates of the Nebraska State Penitentiary — don’t Jones is a corrections officer at Nebraska’s only maximum security prison for men. He deals with citi zens who, according to society, do not deserve their freedom. A typical day for Jones involves potentially dangerous situations that for him add interest to a job many others would not want He thinks he’s created a balance between the two so he can maintain order but . not be seen as an enemy by inmates. Jones said he and his colleagues know their primary job: to protect people outside prison walls from those within. Good day, sunshine With the backdrop of an early spring sunrise streaming through the Constantina razor wire enveloping the prison, Jones leaves behind the J relative safety of the administration building and enters “the yard.” Jones stands not a stitch over 5 feet 10 inches and weighs less than 180 pounds. Aside from the deten tion tactics he learned in training, Jones’ only protection lies in a dis patch radio, a set of handcuffs and the watchful eyes of the prison’s nine tower guards. It is here that the 32-year-old will spend most of his "eight-hour., shift—in the company of.convicts who outnumber him and about six other guards by the hundreds. Jones said the diversity and ex citement of his job far outweighed the possible dangers it presented. ‘1 love working the yard,” Jones said. “That’s my favorite assign ment. If I could, I’d work the yard everyday. It’s outside, and you’re dealing with lots of situations. Things are always moving.” Inmates are scattered in groups involved in whatever passes the time: some play cards, some play basketball, others just stand and talk. Four housing units designed in the utilitarian-style of state park buildings initially greet visitors ex iting the administration building. Asphalt drives and concrete sidewalks weave throughout the 28 acre campus, whose fringes are host to a variety of buildings, some of them dating back to the 1940s. Among them are a woodworking shop, a library, a corrugated metal building housing the prison’s South east Community College branch and, as expected, a license plate fac tory. Mr. Congeniality? The individual guards’ person alities and styles of interaction with the inmates come heavily into play in the yard. Mingling with the pris oners isn?t expressly prohibited, but Jones abstains. He said he thinks that being detached from the inmates lessened the setting’s inherent dan gers. The roles of prisoner and guard have been established, and it is prison after all, he said. “I wouldn’t say I’m real popu lar (with prisoners),” Jones said. “That’s not what I’m after, That’s not my job. Basically, I want than to know I’m going to keep the rules,' that I’m not going to let things slide. “At the same time, I’m not here to be a jerk, either. I’m not here to ruin anyone’s day.” Please see GUARD on 3 By Erin Gibson Senior Reporter University of Nebraska-Lincoln stu dents may be the last students in the NU system to gain access to the newly purchased Lotus Notes e-mail system. The central NU plan shows all UNL students gaining access to Lotus Notes over the next six years. But UNL will not follow this plan, Kent Hendrickson, UNL associate vice chancellor for information services, said Tuesday. UNL students are not guaranteed access to Lotus Notes, he said. If stu dents demonstrate a need for a more advanced e-mail system than bigred, some may be considered to move onto the system in late 1998 or 1999. No students will gain access this year, Hendrickson said. The central NU plan states 1,229 UNL students would gain access this year. As the largest NU campus, UNL must move cautiously toward total implementation, he said. East Campus faculty, staff and administrative offices on City Campus will move onto the system in 12 to 18 months. 66 If a demand is there, then we will be looking at students” Kent Hendrickson UNL associate vice chancellor for information services In late 1998, other City Campus faculty who choose to obtain the Lo tus Notes system may gain access. Fac ulty members who don’t want to use Lotus Notes don’t have to, he said. Flagship foibles The time UNL students come online will depend on students’ feelings about switching from bigred to Lotus Notes e-mail and what instructors will require as part of their course curriculum. Please see E-MAIL on 6 luxedos not required for job opportunities By Tasha E. Kelter *+ Staff Reporter Students seeking summer jobs and internships also may get a dose of nos talgia for senior prom at today’s Stu dent Employment and Internship Cen ter Job Prom. More than 40 employers with im mediate openings will operate booths in the Nebraska Union’s Centennial Room to answer students’ questions — against a backdrop of balloons, foil stars and music. Representatives from several Lin coln and Omaha companies will be on hand from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. to inform students about jobs, take ap plications and maybe even extend offers, said Emily Wilber, student employment specialist and Job Prom coordinator. “These employers all want to talk to students,” Wilber said. “They have actual openings.” Many of the companies will have openings for internships, summer jobs and part-time, year-round jobs, she said. Also, Wilber said, the Job Prom could benefit students who just want to make contacts or get information about career opportunities. “You can make some very practi cal, if not helpful, contacts just to let them know what you’re interested in,” she said. The companies will represent job opportunities for majors or areas of interest ranging from nursing to politi cal science to journalism. They include Sandhills Publishing, the Coca-Cola Corp. and the Nebraska Attorney General’s office. Other attractions of the Job Prom include die award of a Schaefer’s TV and Appliance Center CD BoomBox to the “prom royalty,” which will be the student who collects the most busi ness cards from the companies present. Students may vote on a company to be the event’s “employer prom royalty,” Students also can be instant win ners of items like bode bags, a football picture autographed by Football Coach Tom Osborne and various gift certifi cates, Wilber said. There will be a bake sale sponsored by Sigma Alpha Iota, a UNL music fra ternity, and the Music Educators’ Na tional Conference. “There’s a lot of ways we can have some fun with this while we’re look ing for a job,” Wilber said. “And... for mal attire is not required.” Read the Daily Nebraskan on the World Wide Web at http:// www.unl.edu/DailyNeb