thursday, eprll 5, 1979 P3 0 dally nebrsskan Injustices1 chronicled for ihz 1979-CO 0 6 H4 Oman are now in prosress Contact Professor Rsy Miller, tttit, 231 f Weitbrook Music Cuildlnnl Open Evenings 1616 St. 7Tie Bes fn Bifce Repdr $1 47002 rnoxtcana iiiBBauimi KANSAS CITY - MEXICO CITY ROUND TRIP Beginning April 24th. Meiicana Airlines Mrill offer substantial discounts lor treeal to Maxiea City. TMi airfare can save you up W 1 34.00 off tho normal roundtrip far. ( Acapulco can b added for only 34 .00 additional) To qualify for this special fere you must romoin in Mexico for at iaatt five days and no mora than 21 dayt and purchese one of our tow cost hotel and aignteeeing packages. We have prepared a colorful brochure to fully daacribe this fare and our low cost tour program!. Travel Coordinators and Moaicana are alto offering Summer Study Pro gram at Mexico's finest colleges and universities. There are a wide variety of courses offered. A few examples ere: Anthropology, Architecture. Arts and Crafts. Botany, Ceramics. Folk Dances, History of Mexico. Inter national Business, Journalism, Latin American Politics and Economics, Mexican Educational System, Psychology. Sociology, Spanish Language and Literature, and Theatre. We will also bo happy to send you information on theae schools. 'Subject to government approvel Monday-Friday travel Pleats tend ma your brochurs describing this fantastic 4147.00 fare to Mexico andor information on ths Student Study Proersmt. Name Address , Schools My Travel Agent is. Sand information on discount airfare, hotel, and sightseeing program Send information on the Student Study Program. Airfare) information only fnnxicnnD & 1 101 Walnut i KanaM City. Mo. 41 OS By Alice Hrnicek A woman entering the working world two generations ago was less likely to notice and protest Injustice, accord ing to two women university employees. Garnet Larson, a retired university instructor who is now a volunteer fellow at Centennial College, and Marilyn Kotaki, a counselor in special services at the Multi cultural Affairs Office, were Wednesday's WomenSpeak lecturers. . Sponsored by Student Y and presented at noon in the Nebraska Union, this week's WomenSpeak was entitled, The Erosion of Women's Liberated Ideas Once They Enter the Work World." During the lecture, the women detailed some of the injustices they have encountered. Larson said she has initiated numerous ideas and projects, but has had the credit taken away by a man. Men take credit Ml can't say this hurts my feelings because this has happened all my life," she said. Larson, who has been self-supporting since she was 17, has degrees in education, English, philosophy and social work at four different institutions. She said she never married and found that "trying for degrees was an excuse for staying in school." Looking back, she said she should have entered the working world. "I never had a great regard for doctorates because it doesn't take above average intelligence to get one," she said. Larson taught while working on her doctorate which cost her an extra year, she said. My dissertation got turned down the first time. But this other woman I was with got it right away. She went in and the professors pitied her. If I wanted my degree I should have gone in and cried." Doctorate degree But Larson said she submitted her dissertation with few modifications the next year and received her degree. "My philosophy is a manner of survival," she stated. "I didn't expect to receive a great deal of credit where deserved because it was picked up by others. If it had been today, I would have been more upset." Part of the reason for her philosophy she said, is that she had always been better able to relate to men than women. "By going to men, my ideas were always looked at and even modified but almost always taken away," she said. "What was important was that if something was established that was valuable, it didn't matter where n cosning. 'sses.. ' k . n tr uw9 f rr cat.. I FORD FORD DIVISION So you've got a few problems with your shape. Don't worry about it, do some thing about it. And a good way o get static 4 is o lead ing the next issue ot '1nslder"-the free supplement to your college newspaper from Ford. You'll find tips on exercise, training and sports. And you'll discover a few of the unusual ways some athletes stay In shape. It's not all running and weight lifting. And you'll also find some very interesting information about how to shape up your ride with the great lineup of 79 Fords. Double chin from lots of pizza with daub! cheese. Sunken chest. Makes breaming hard. 100 calories. Tennis elbow. Great for resting on table tops. Bstt overhang, makes tying shoes a problem. Serf knee. Used mainly to waft to refrigerator and back. Swollen ankles. AH -eround gluttony. Hasnl touched his toes In years. the credit went." Although in the past, Larson found men more frank and open than women, she said she believes that women no longer use the same tactics to protect their position. -During the initial beginning where women were not common in the professional field, women looked to see whose place was where in a certain establishment. Women were in competition with men, because there were so few opportunities. Unequal salaries "I never got the same salary as men ," she noted. As a full professor, she never received the top of the scale pay for associate professors, Larson said. "If there was something you wanted to do, you weighed it against the money. It never occurred to us to chafenge. Instead, I would go off and say it isn't worth it." One of the conflicts Larson said she has encountered is living up to the unisex ideal and maintaining her femininity. "I've always talked more easily to men, but in my re lationships with men, I never played the role of woman. It startled me that living alone meant being unmarried." Larson emphasized that the quality of intelligence is no different between men and women. "Women may not necessarily compete with men but can take jobs on an equal pay basis," she said. "Must there be a reversal or is there some way men and women can come together and still have their sexualities but lose con sciousness of it in certain situations?" Working with men Kotati agreed that it is often easier to work with men, but added this is partially because she grew up with two brothers and no sisters. "However, I often enjoy when I can share conversa tions with women, the thoughts and experiences women alone have in common," she said. She added that a person has to realize that she will be working alone no matter who she is working with. "The aloneness comes from competition," she said. "It's important to protect your vulnerability by keeping ideas to yourself so someone doesn't steal them. It . can be a cruel world whether working with men or women." The counselor received her masters degree in rehabilita tive counseling from Michigan State University, she said. In her nine years as a working woman, she said she has learned to psyche herself up to be in certain situations. "I was prepared to be the only woman or black in some situations, but I was not ready to be the first pregnant woman" Kotati said. After being employed at a social service agency in New York, she became aware of sexist comments made by men. 'The psychological preparation one needs, you're not even aware of until you encounter the situation," she noted. One of the added difficulties she has incurred is raising a family. "Because I'm more and more aware that I must spend time with my children, I'm finding it difficult," she said. start sfos The Campus Red Cross The American Home will meet at 5:30 pm. to- Economics Association stu- nigjit in the Nebraska dent member section will Union. Room number will meet at 5 pjn. in the East be posted. Union. Room number will be posted. e- to. f Look into reflections of spring... Look for (VSAQES N3 Jn tomonow's DH