n Tuesday, January 31, 1984 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 83 No. 89 7 rn . X-' " r highlight B-We By Noreen Nlijni UNL students will share the stage with Chancellor Martin Massengale, Regent Nancy Hoch, state Sen. Chri3 Abboud and Mies Nebraska, Kris Low enberg in a fashion show during 13 Week '84. B-Week, sponsored by the Student Advisory Board of the Business College, starts Feb. 5 and continues to Feb. 10. Xerox, Osco Drug, the State of Neb raska's Department of Revenue and the Nebraska Society of Certified Public Accountants are among the companies represented in this year's B-Week. Each company will have a booth on the first floor of the College oi Business Adminis tration building. The "Dress to Impress" fashion semi nar, sponsored by Ben Simon's, Inc., will attempt to show students how to dress for success, said Laura Meyer, co-chairperson of the seminar. A raffle will take place during the "Dress to Impress" seminar. The grand prize is a $ 1 00 Ben Simon's gift certificate. Raffle tickets will be sold before the seminar and at the door. - Hardware and software from such companies as Radio Shack and Epsom will highlight the Computer Fair. Two sessions teach students how to use the computers in the basement of the CBA building. John Nelson, a member of the Young Presidents Club and president of Insur ance Agents, Inc., will lead an open discussion. The B-Week Bash at Judges, 2630 Cornhusker Highway, wraps up B-Week '84 with entertainment by the band, "Vicious Rumors." A freshman leadership seminar and banquet is also included in B-Week '84. It is open to those freshmen business majors with grade point averages of 3.4 or higher. Tickets to the "Dress to Impress" seminar and the Bash will be sold at booths in the Nebraska Union throughout B-Week, or may be purchased from members of the Student Advisory Board of the College of Business Administra tion. B-Week '84 allows students to interact with the community and other stu dents, said Becky Barlow, co-chairperson of B-Week '84. B-Week, she said, also promotes the (College of Business Admini stration and its student clubs. Schedules of B-Week '84 events can be obtained in the CBA dean's office. My! es is only fourth black to receive doctoral degree " mx't i- -km. Lu . v'xA l X - k . .. . . ur:- , . . 1 By Lori Paulsen When Jessie Myles, assistant profes sor of sociology, finishes his disserta tion and earns his Ph.D. this semester, he will become the fourth black Ph.D. teaching full time at UNL According to Jimmie Smith, Multi Cultural Affairs director, only three black teaching faculty members now have Ph.D-.'s of about 1 ,800 UNL teach ers. He said the number of blacks with doctorates is lower now than in 1970 when there were four. Myles said he accepted the position at UNL because the program had what he wanted to teach, and the university had the resources he needed for his research. Myles said this is his first full time teaching position, although he has had eight years of teaching expe rience. "I never wanted to teach," he said, but after I started teaching I became more comfortable with it. I felt like I had something to offer." Myles has taught in graduate pro grams at Grambling State University in Louisiana, Northeast Louisiana State University and Harris Stowe State Col lege in St. Louis. He has also taught at Florissant Community College and Wash ington University in St. Louis. Myles said he chose to study sociol ogy because it is flexible and broad. "I could go from the classroom into many fields," Myles said. Once interested in how sociology relates to religion and economics, Myles said teaching is what he likes now and is where he wants to be in his career. Aside from teaching, researching is an important part of Myles' career. For two years, he has been researching the role of blacks in the criminal justice system. Myles said he is trying to find out if race makes a difference in fear and beliefs about crime. Some of what Myles teaches in his classes also deals with racial issues. "I see the need of dealing with racial issues," he said. They can't be put under the table because they interfere with interactions of others." Myles said he is concerned with teaching more than the subject of the class. One of his goals is for students to get a better understanding of them selves, v "It is important to dispel formed stereotypes and bring people to realize they have them," Myles said. Myles said meeting the needs of stu dents makes him an effective teacher. "You have to be fair and firm, but you must also be flexible," he said. "You have to meet the needs of students when they aren't always obvious." Myles has taught in both predomi nantly black and predominantly white colleges and said the demands from him are the same because the stu dents' needs are similar. Myles said he thinks most students would benefit from teachers of a dif ferent race than themselves. He suggested one reason UNL has so few black Ph.D. teachers is that Lin coln is predominantly white. ' "A black Ph.D. with a family has to be concerned with his family members' welfare " he said. Myles said he was concerned about moving his children from a 40 percent black neighborhood in St. Louis and rearing them in a predominantly white neighborhood. Myles is married and has two boys; Derryl, 5, and Kevin, 2. Blacks with doctorates also worry about salary and the commitment of the university to hiring more black faculty members. "True commitment is important," Myles said. "It's not just a surface attempt to get quotas." Myles said he thinks UNL realizes the need to bring in black professors. "Like other universities, UNL is competing to get black teachers to come here," he said. So far, Myles said, he and his family have adjusted well to Lincoln. His goal is to play an active part in the com munity. "I see it as an obligation to myself and the community to get involved," he said. Craig AndretenDally Nebraskan This tree, once nearly 50 feet tall, was felled not by a woodman's ax, but by Sunday's wind storm. The cedar at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Andresen, 3133 S. 40th in Lincoln caused little damage as it fell, missing power lines by only feet. Eoontz: Women's lives depend on pay equity By Mary C. Reilly Women, college students, part-time and unmarried persons suffer wage and employment discrimination, said Elizabeth Koontz, chairwoman of the National Commission of Working Wo men. Koontz was the guest speaker at a seminar Saturday on pay equity. Pay equity holds that jobs requiring comparable but not identical skills and responsibilities should be paid equally. The issue affects everyone in the public and private sector, Koontz said. As employees and employers, it is important to know the impact of pay equity in our society, according to a brochure produced by Friends of the Nebraska Commission on the Status of Women. This country boasts a work ethic," Koontz said. The basic principle behind thework ethic is that if one does the job well, one will have an opportunity to advance according to the skill and one's ability and desire," Koontz said. That's a big hoax," Koontz said, one that has especially been played on women. v "Now, where I come from in the South, it was called segregation," Koontz said. "But within segregation, there also was the same thing. There were certain things girls were supposed to do, women were supposed to do and certain other things men were supposed to do. So we really don't have to worry about whether it s segregation or not. It's our society," Koontz said. Koontz said she has been successful . in her career because she has been allowed to come up through the sieve where women and blacks were hired so the employer would look good, she said. Continued on Page 2 Inside - - A new position means coming home for UNL's pre-admission counselor Psga 3 Choreographer Robin John son hopes to help interest in the art of dance grow by leaps and bounds Pegs 8 A Canadian sprinter comes to Nebraska to further his Olympic dreams Peja 10 JLllll Arts and Entertainment. . .... 3 Classified 11 Crossword 12 Editorial 4 Off TheVyire .'. 2 Sports 10