BEFORE YOU CAN FOLLOW YOUR DREAMS, YOU'VE GOYIO FOLLOW THE ROUS. Men who don't register with Selective Service aren't eligible for federal * student aid, job training, and most federal employment. So register at the post office within a month of your 18th birthday. It only takes five minutes to fill out a simple card. □ Register With Selective Service, It's OvKk. It's Susy. And It's The Law. A public wr«i(» o* thu publtcol'O'V Mind, motivation urged at seminar Black students aren’t ‘ordinary,’ author says By Kim Spurlock Staff Reporter Black students need to speak up for what they believe in and be repre sentatives of the African American culture, nationally renowned author and speaker Na’im Akbar said. “Don’t let anybody tell you that you are ordinary students: Ordinary is one thing you’re not. Because to endure an environment where you’re con stantly being reminded of your small ness rather than your greatness is more than a little to deal with,” Akbar told a crowd of more than 600 Saturday night at a banquet topping off the Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government, Black student leaders represent an important piece of African Ameri cans’ futures, said Akbar, a teacher in the Department of Psychology at Florida State University who has appeared on “Tony Brown’s Jour nal,” “Donahue” and the “Oprah Winfrey Show.” “It is very critical that you under stand something about the nature of youM^ponsibiht^^elUMh^iaUire -«--— “ Don’t let anybody tell you that you are ordinary students. Akbar author and speaker ---— 99 ~ of the process that brought you where you are,” Akbar said. He said black people don’t appre ciate the value of what they represent to themselves because their origins have been hidden from them. It is the foundation of being who blacks are as a people that determines what it is they will do, he said. “The foundation of our ability to operate collectively is in our under standing of where we came from,’’ he said. Akbar said that for much of the 30 generations of slavery, it was illegal for blacks to engage in learning. Slave holders feared they might find some thing out about themselves, he said. The information about who blacks were was systematically distorted, he said, so they would not have any sense of connection with Africa. Akbar said it wasn’t accidental that Africa was called the “Dark Continent,” that the images of the African continent were negative and that blacks have had to find out the positive things they know about Af rica on their own. Because information about Africa was hidden away or degraded, he said, blacks began to lose sight of themselves — a loss that has not yet been regained. Black children have dreams of working for big companies instead of owning them, he said, and the black leaders of tomorrow have no aspira tions of owning their own national newspaper to tell the world their view Akbar points. Akbar said society’s attempts to destroy blacks intellectually, cultur ally and psychologically have not kept them from fighting, and that they are special. “Our only leadership is within ourselves,” he said. “We are the fu ture planners. What we do will deter mine our future.” I Just caught ^ a COLD? *£* Harris Laboratories is currently looking for healthy males & females, ages 12-70 who have recently caught a COMMON COLD with a runny nose. It ydu qualify, you would be paid up to $175 00 to evaluate the efficacy of a nasal spray. For more information, call Harris at 476-6548 between 8:30 am and 4:30 pm Monday thru Friday. HARRIS LABORATORIES, INC. 621 Rose • Lincoln, NE 68502 “Striving to improve the Quality of Life" ■.IIIIIHIIIIBIIIII11 illllllH II ■—IMI—IIBKIMIIMMWII—llllifl NEWS BRIEFS1 Award nomination deadline Feb. 15 Nominations will be accepted through Feb. 15 for the 1991 Gradu ate Teaching Assistant Award, sponsored annually by the UNL Alumni Association. All current, full-time graduate teaching assistants at UNL are eli gible for the award. A nomination form available from the Alumni Association, three written student endorsements and the candidate’s r£sum6 or curricu lum vita arc required. For information about FREE FOOD for pregnant women, infants, and children under the age of 5, call: l-800-®|T|[c]jll7l Black self-respect urged By Tabitha Hiner Senior Reporter Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha was supposed to discuss “Blacks in the Political Process” on Saturday, but he said talking about politicians would make the audience of 400 “either fall asleep or leave.” Instead, Chambers reminded par ticipants at the 14th Annual Big Eight Conference on Black Student Gov ernment to strive for self-respect and respect for each other. Respecting each other is impor tant for keeping the black community going, Chambers said. “No group has been completely destroyed by their enemies, but we can destroy ourselves,” he said. Chambers warned that “every repressed group has always turned on their own kind.” Black people turn on themselves when they join gangs and shoot at each other, Chambers said. Chambers said that if he were to meet a Crips gang member, he might be shot simply because he liked to wear blue. He quipped that all he would have to do to save himself would be to put a white piece of paper in front of him, because gang members have “a gun that will shoot black people only.” Black people shouldn’t allow the internal fighting to continue, Cham bers said. Instead, they should prac tice more self-respect and learn to trust and believe in each other more. Calling black women “the best thing about us,” Chambers urged the men in the audience to respect them. There is a double standard when it comes to the stereotypes placed on women, Chambers said. While men who are involved with many women arc called names such as “lovers” and “Valentinos,” he said, derogatory terms are applied to women who are involved with many men. He ended his speech by saying that geneticists have traced the origin of all human life to a black woman in Africa — a finding which shows all i people arc equal. “If white people say to us, ‘Your mama,’” Chambers said, “you tell them ‘My mama is your mania.”’ Telling about his own confronta tions at the State Capitol and ways he dealt w ith them, Chambers said black people should stop being complacent when they face unfair treatment. Earlier in his speech, Chambers said unfair treatment could come in the forms of racism, verbal harass ment or physical confrontations. For instance, Chambers said, an upset man once approached him and pointed a finger in his face. Chambers said he stood up for himself by casing the man’s hand down. Then the man called for security — an example of how white people arc “brave when they think they ’ve got everything going their way,” Chambers said. bpeaker blames problems on lack of self-esteem By Dionne Searcey Staff Reporter “Self-esteem is the key to black liberation,” a speaker told more than 450 students and faculty members attending the Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government on Friday night. Juwansa Kunjufu, executive di rector of African-American Images in Chicago, said drugs, pregnancy, crime, lack of education and unem ployment arc all symptoms of a larger issue — low self-esteem. “You don’t use drugs when you feel good about yourself,” he said. America doesn’t have a drug prob lem. It has a self-discipline problem.” He said the slogan “Just Say No!” is the “most asinine thing I have ever heard. The real issue is what you sav ‘yes’ to.” Kunjufu said one key to crime reduction is brotherly love. When we love ourselves we turn toward each other, not on each other." he said. He said blacks need to take a look at their lives and develop self-esteem You may not know our name, I but we've been a cornerstone of America for 125 years. We wouldn't be a bit surprised if you didn't recognize our company name — Cargill. But we've been in business since 1865, helping America’s farmers feed the world. | f* MM We’re a company built on talented people. Our particular skills include marketing; handling and processing bulk commodities; risk management; strategic capital investment; and taking an innovative approach to generating cost efficiencies. We apply those skills to a broad range of businesses. Today, Cargill handles I commodities as diverse as scrap metal and molasses, cocoa and fertilizer, cotton and ocean freight, and wheat and orange juice. Our operations vary from flour mills to futures trading, from meat-packing plants to mining salt, and from steel mills to selling seed. 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Hmmm, you’re acting white,”’ Kunjufu said. “Have you ever heard another white teasing another white (saying), ‘You’re on the honor roll. You’re acting black.’” He said modern society has taken the chains off blacks’ wrists and ankles and put them on their minds by mak ing sure blacks don’t know the roots of their culture. Most history instructors teach black history starting in 1619 when African Americans were brought to America on slave boaLs, he said, but the lirst black civilizations were in Egypt. “Where you start determines where you end up,” Kunjufu said. “If you start in 1619, you start on plantations and end up in the ghetto.’