Teleconference gives views on low minority enrollment By Michelle McDonald Staff Reporter Although Jim Crow laws and “sepa rate-but-equal” clauses are long outdated, low minority enrollment in post-secondary education institutions still is holding male minorities back, a group of panelists told UNL students Wednesday at the Nebraska Union. Twenty-two people attended “Men of Color: Absence in Academia,” a telecon ference sponsored by the Affirmative Ac tion Office at the University of Ncbraska Lincoln. The national teleconference, based in Washington, D.C., included 15 minority panelists, who arc professionals in educa tion, psychology, government and business. Some panelists said social inequalities and a lack of encouragement from teachers stops minorities from attending college. According to panel members, statistics show that while blacks constitute ft percent of the population in general, they make up 50 percent of the prison population. Thirty five percent of black males use drugs, half of Hispanic and black children grow up in poverty, and 90pcrcent of American Indian men drop out of school. Gussic Anderson, a retired teacher, said minorities growing up in poverty do not ' have the self-esteem or the family cohcsivc ncss to compete fairly in American schools. U.S. Sen. Cleo Fields of Louisiana said teachers must give more positive reinforce ment to male minority students. Fields said a teacher once told him he was only capable of being a mechanic. "But I wanted to be a lawyer,” he said. Teachers must build students’ self-es teem by encouraging them to go farther and by pushing them harder, he said. William Cross of Harvard University said, according to his own study, 67 percent of male minority students said their teachers didn’t push them hard enough. But he said most students indicated they planned to attend college despite what their teachers told them. Sarah Melendez, a Hispanic member of the panel, said the word “minority” unfor tunately conjures up a negative image. She said stereotypes like “minority ’ and “underachiever” can lotfcr self-esteem. People of color arc at a disadvantage, she said, because tuition has "skyrocketed” and the gap between white and minority incomes has widened. Terry Goods, a senior in the UNL Col lege of Arts & Sciences, said he was sur prised at the low turnout. He said he came to the teleconference because minorities’ ab sence in academia is an issue that “we men of color arc interested in.” The teleconference was the first in a se ries of three The next is planned for April 18. Suffragette and author teach senators about past, future By Emily Rosenbaum Senior Reporter The Nebraska Legislature received a blast from the past and a glimpse into the future Wednesday during New Horizons Day. The program, which was started three years ago to bring new perspectives to the Legisla ture, included a portrayal of suffragette Eliza beth Cady Stanton by Sally Roesch Wagner of the University of Califomia-Davis. Rushworth Kidder, author of two books focusing on world issues in the 21st century and a columnist for the Christian Science Monitor, addressed senators and visitors about ethics for the next century. Wagner appeared before the Legislature in full 19th-century garb and spoke as Stanton did during her lifelong struggle for women’s rights. Wagner described the hardships endured by 19th-century pioneer women who made their way across the plains but received no recogni tion for their work. “Women of Nebraska lived under an oli garchy of sex,” she said, ‘‘a dictatorship of men.” * She asked the senators and guests if women wanted the opportunity to vote because of vanity. “Why did we want the ballot?” she asked. “Because it was our right.” Wagner exhibited the frustration women felt when they were denied their “inherent right” to vote. She told how Susan B. Anthony was arrested for voting in a presidential elec tion and was fined $100. I “To vote was a man s duty and a woman’s crime,’ ’ she said. Stanton was in Nebraska many times from 1866 until her death in 1902. She came to Nebraska, especially during the 1871 and 1875 constitutional conventions, to try to get women’s suffrage into the U.S. Constitution and the Nebraska Constitution. Stanton spoke in Lincoln at University Hall on June 16, 1871, while the convention was meeting. Kidder, author of “An Agenda for the 21st Century’ ’ and “Reinventing the Future: Global Goals for the 21st Century,’’ told senators that policymakers must address the agenda for the next century. Kidder interviewed 22 artists, scientists, policymakers and philosophers around the world to learn what major issues the world will face in the next century . He said their concerns included nuclear power, overpopulation, the environment, the gap between the developing and the industrial world, restructuring educational systems and the breakdown in public and private morality. Leaders cannot address these issues without considering ethics, Kidder said. “As we move into the 20th century, we move into a global community,’’ he said. Isolationism no longer will be possible as countries become dependent on each other for success and survival, he said. 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Inc. 1/30 cm* carfi flrdmctton nlur Nebraskan Editor Amy Edward* Photo Chief Dav* Hansan 472-1766 Night News Editors Jana Pedersen Managing Editor Ryan Steeves Diane Brayton Assoc News Editors Liu Donovan Art Director Brian Shellito Eric Planner General Manager Dan Shaft II Editorial Page Editor Bob Nelson Production Manager Katherine Pollcky Wire Editor Brandon Loomis Advertising Manager Jon Daehnke Copy Desk Editor Darcia Wiegert Sales Manager Kerry Jeffries Sports Editor Jefl Apel Publications Board Arts & Entertainment Chairman Bill Vobejda Editor Michael Deeds 436-9993 Diversions Editor Mick Dyer Professional Adviser Don Walton Graphics Editor John Bruce 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year, weekly during summer sessions. 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