6 Friday, March 11, 1933 Daily Ncbraskan Advancement WITHOUT AN ADVANCED DEGREE 1 for Yrr i 235 S. l7thSL Philadelphia. PA 19103 (215I732-6GO0 Approved by the American Bar Association Optra (rd by Fura Ugal Inc. fVfuwytvanw Corporation College seniors. 11 you plan to get a job after graduation, why not consider a profession? In 3 months, we prepare vu for careers in law. management. finance. Our 8 Intensive courses are nationally recognized for high aca demic quality. Over 90 of our graduates secure jobs in their specialties. Over 5.000 graduates hold positions in law firms, banks and corporations in 1 10 cities. We provide a substantial tuition refund if we cannot secure a job for you In the city of your choice. Guarantee your future. Learn how the Institute can help you advance In a career. Our representative will be on campus March 17. 19S3. would like to arrange an Inter view at a nother ti me. Pltnse ca 11 me at one of the phones noted. Please send me information about the Instituteor Paralegal Training. Name Address City, State. Zip College Graduation Date ( L 1 L Present phone Permanent phone c mke blasts regression in civil rights By Kein Hanken Former California Conetesswoman Yvonne Braithwaite Buike. addressing a small group in the Nebraska Union Ballroom Wednesday night, stressed the existing pattern of achievement, then regression, regarding the civil rights and social status of blacks, women and minorities in this country, Buike was the opening speaker of the Fighth Annual G.I.. Hendricks Symposium, sponsored by UNL's De partment of Political Science. The theme for this year's program is "Affirmative Action: Race, Sex and Inequality in America." I'M Chancellor Martin Massengale, in welcoming Burke and her guests, said he, as a scholar and admin istrator, sees the symposium as an opportunity, to learn and participate in the Affirmative action program. Burke, the Los Angeles Times' Woman of the Year, said she began her career with the 1960s' civil rights movement and can remember well the words of Martin Luther King : "Progress never rolls in on the wheels of inevitability." "Tonight's subject is one that is indeed challenging, and these are challenging times," Burke said. "We can never assume that even though we have achieved gains in the areas of social rights that that will always be." Burke cited the history of the black politician as an example. The black politicians of the Reconstruction era were more educated than President Lincoln, she said, but they were forced from the political scene by the "corrupt compromise" of President Hayes and Southern white politicians. Jim crowism.the deterioration of the 14th Amendment and an era without participation of blacks in the political process resulted, she said. Today, 21 members of Congress are black, Burke said, so the black politician has seen a full cycle, from achieve ment to regression to achievement. In 1925, two women served as state governors in the United States, but now women have been removed from the higher levels of the government, she said. Burke's election to Congress in 1972 made her the first female representative from California in 20 years, and the first black woman representative ever. Buike said she sees the Reagan administration's re cent appointments of women to the government as a means of combating a 5 1 percent loss in the women's vote it incurred. Reagan is doing the kinds of things that will place women in the lower levels of government. Buike called the appointments the type of "media campaigning" that top-level government personnel have mastered. The uninformed voter who is undecided at the polls will have access to literature stating that the Reagan administration has had more women in its gov eminent than any other government, Burke said, and it's those types of things that are decisive for that voter, not the real issues. L'ducation probably represents the one place where a closing gap between blacks and whites really exists, Burke said. There have been tremendous increases in the number of minorities entering college, she said. While that statistic has not decreased, there has been a slight reduction in their entrance to the medical and law schools, she added. Burke said the economy and the cutbacks in financial aid, as well as the lack of commitment by many institut ions to Affirmative Action, are to blame for those de creases. If a white candidate who has been denied admittance into medical or law college sees a woman or a minority accepted, he blames affirmative action, Burke said. Those impressions hurt the program, she said. Burke said that the government has a requirement to ensure a certain level of employment. It has the means of stimulating industry, she said, but instead, national tax and trade policies have pulled us away from using the American work forces. Burke said she felt it was a national disgrace that a 33 percent unemployment rate in the steel industry could exist while the government imports as much steel as it does. Continued on Page 7 uQQQQ TT- is 3 rl-1 1 i 5 f ?)J i r One of the 54 people to send a shamrock personal that is. On St. Patty's Day, we're running a full page of big, green shamrocks. 3 times as big as a regular personal. More than enough room to say Happy St. Patrick's Day. . .or whatever else you can think of. But there's only 54 of these little jewels. They'll go fast. Come down to Room 34 of the Nebraska Union before 1:00 pm on Wednesday, March 16 and get in on the green. n Dailv i J 7 11 V. I ( V I I , 1 I n rv 1 I II X V If l I 1 I J I Q Q Q QQQ L XJ Lu ( Q Q GAME CONVENTION LIN-CON 4 HOSTED BY: UNL GAME CLUB APRIL 8, 9, 10 MINIATURES: Civil War, Napolionics, WWII, Ancients, Star Trek BOARDGAMES: Pente, Monopoly, Squad Leader etc. . . Also D & D , Starfleet Battles etc. For More Info: 134 North 13th 476-3829