Wednesday, cpril 20, 1977 paga 2 dally nebresksn short stuff A representative from the Veterans Administration (VA) regional office will be in Nebraska Union 228 from 11 to noon today to answer questions about VA benefits. The Nebraska Union Advisory Board will meet at 7 tonight in Union 203. The Engineering Toast masters will meet at 5:30 tonight in Nebraska Engin eering Center 241. The UNL Young Demo crats will meet at 9 tonight in Union 345. ' ' The Mexican American Student Association (MASA) is sponsoring Cultural Awareness Days 1977. The theme is "Hispanos in the Midwest: A Multicultural Legacy." MASA is presenting speak ers, panels, films, dance and an art exhibition today through Sunday at UNL. All events are free unless other wise indicated. calendar 12:45 pjn.-Underwood School, Union North Con ference Room. 1:30 pjn.-Mexican American Student Associa tion Cultural Days "Leo Estrada" Union 242. 1:30 p.m.-Mini-Univer-sity "Working Parents," Union 222. . 1 ;3Q pjn.-Admissions-, German Exchange Students, Union 232. -4 p.m.-Booster Yell Squad Interviews, Union South Conference Room. 4 p.m.-Speech Com munication Reading Hour, Union 232. 5:30 pjn.-Gamma Lambda, , Union Harvest Room A. 5:30 pjn.-Engineering Toastmastenj Union Har- vest Room C. 6:3Q pjn.-ASUN Sen ate Meeting, Union 202. - 7:30 pjn.-Nebraska Union Advisory Board, Union 203. 7 pjn.-A.I.E.S.E.C, Union Auditorium. 7 pjn.-Nebraska Human Resources 1 Foundation Pi).?., Union 222. 7 pjm. - Junior 1FC, Union 337. 7:30 pjn.-Mexican American Student Associa tion Cultural Days "Henry Casso," Union 242. 7:30 pjn.-Math Coun selors, Union 225 B-C. Nebraska East Union 8 ajn. to 5 pjn. Up date seminar, Nebraska East Union Great Plains Room. Noon-Extension Home Economics Coordinating Committee, Columbine Room. 3 pjn.-Water resource seminar, Cottonwood Room. 3 pjn.-National Execu tive Housekeepers Associa tion, Sycamore Room. 3 pjn.-Southeast Com munity College. Sunflower Room. '5:30 pjn,-East Union Program . Council, Cotton wood Room. 6:30 p .in -Rodeo Club, Cchartine Room. The Student Slavic Com mittee will debate "The Role of Ideology in the Soviet Context" at 3:30 to day in Oldfather Hall 538. The UNL. Accounting Club will meet at 3:45 today in the Union. Room number will be posted. Beef, steak consumers are asked to give their opinion of steak samples and they will be given a free ice cream cone from the UNL Dairy Store on East Cam pus. Persons interested should stop at Food and Nutrition Bldg. 115 at 2:45 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The Nomads Youth Hostel Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Union. Room number will be posted. ff Bmcm your ho 'J..:,.. ; ;. rEx J! . -I . Trom ncon-fo mitinlahf. ' ' . I II - mm m wrmmm a m SS' - t ... 1st Tke on i! I "I w r i - V .J .. By Sharon Frchncr Audre Lorde, who calls herself a "black woman warrior poet," said all a poet can do is use her own experiences in her writing. Lords, a teacher of poetry at John J. College of Criminal Justice In New York, also teaches poetry classes at the Poets' Center, conducts workshops, and docs read ings around the country. She has traveled in the eastern United States, Africa, Mexico and Russia. Lorde gave a poetry readiag Monday nlsht at the Nebraska Union. She has written two bocks of poetry and was the co winner of the National Book Award for Poetry In 1974. Lorde ilso was poetry editor of the Amazon Quarterly. Lorde said poets use their own experiences to tell greater truths that make emotional bridges between peoples' experiences. She said her own experiences are those of a black woman and she does not consider being black and a woman a limitation. , "It does not remove rr.tf from the human race," she said. "It adds to it. It's not a restrictive categorization; it's an expansive categorization." A writer for 30 years, Lorde said she tries to illuminate the world from her position and share with people who have totally different experiences. She said her poetry has grown and changed somewhat, but it still reaches the emotions first. mm mm iiio i nurcaay ana t-naoy only.. Best Ckance ToS S your upring and uumme E verytking from Skoes to Suits ; ?JiO' Gn&ipo Sffopo n nn.rLno rrv v vvu CD ,4 panence t midnight ' ave resses JLxLj I n n sr ?An 144 nopffh 14!?Ii to tell fri3'ihs 'Pw mnvfls through verslve, because it causes people to feel something they think they should not feel, she said. , She said this suppression of true feeling puts all people at a disadvantage. ,,'. "Women in general are not suppo::d to really feel their own feelings. We're supposed to fed what we've been told, and that's the sign of our inferiority." "That's why we're the "weaker sex.' Men think and women feci. They (men) respect feelings, but they don't want to do it. it's a double bind," Lorde tsii. Lorde also said she believes people should use every weapon possible to preserve the earth, which the said is dying. Poetry is such a weapon, she tdd, End part of her function is to urge others to become aware that they can help the earth survive. She said people have function and power, and they must choose now to use it. People must define their wants and needs, Lorde said, and try to fulfill them in a way not oppressive to others. "You have a responsibility to speak up,' she said. As an example, Lorde compared the acceptance by students of a professor's unsatisfactory teaching methods with the unquestioning obedience of the Nazis. AS ummer War to Owimsuits! Ota Solo V ' f feelings." she said. It h iK. droL e I ! ars-