THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1969 PAGE 8 V 1 4 I I f t I 9 t Assistantships now available for 1969-70 Selection of student assistants for the 1969-70 academic year has begun, according to University officials. The selection will be completed by the middle of March so that the new SA's can receive orientation in a spring training program. Applicants for the 120 positions - available in men's and women's residence halls at the University are now going through interviews with residence directors and panels composed of three or four stu dent assistants. In addition, each applicant is rated by 10 residents on his or her floor in the hall. PARTICIPATING in a discussion group is the final step in the selection process. Each group is composed of four SA ap plicants and two residence directors. The applicant is evaluated on his or her con tribution to the group's discussion concern ing some aspect of dormitory life. The deadline for submitting applica tions for student assistants was Monday. Those interested in the 12 residence hall graduate assistant positions available for the 1969-70 academic year may still apply. The position is open to anyone who will have acquired a Bachelor's degree before next September. Wayne T. Kuncl, residence hall coordinator, said that the Housing Office was particularly interested in persons with experience in residence hall living and persons who are career oriented towards working with people. However, no particular graduate major is required. In addition to room and board, graduate assistants receive $1400 and the opportunity for training and experience in college stu dent personnel work. Many times the graduate assistant moves up to the position of residence director after receiving his Master's degree, Kuncl said. Adamson co-sponsors bill to lower voting age ; ;.! .'.; ' .. ".. .V'V ' vv V'.y -.y -' -. . v V . ar i ' f Smiling hopefully, Sen. Elvin Adamson wishes to give 20-year-olds a chance to vote in 1970. He is co-sponsoring L.B. 168, one of a pair of of measures to lower the voting age. Nebraska 20-year-olds may have a chance to vote in 1970 if state legislators support Sen. Elvin Ad monsons bill for submission of a constitutional voting amendment. Legislative Bill 168 is one of pair of measures co-sponsored by Adamson which would lower the age for legal responsibility in the state from 21 to 20 years. The bills' other spossors are Sens. C. W.. Holmquist of Oakland and Eugene Mahoney of Omaha. The other bill, LB 167, would allow 20-year-olds to enter into contractual agreements without consent of parent or guardian. ADAMSON SAID he thought the bill to lower responbilitities as well as privileges would be an incentive to Nebraska voters to support lowering the voting age. "I support the lower voting age because that is the age where most people begin fulltime work, or go into the service," Adamson said. "Also, the majority are out of high school, and should assume more responsibilities." "Some people are capable of voting at age 16 or 17," Adamson said. "Others never reach full maturity." THE SENATOR said he support ed the recent efforts to lower the voting age to 19, although he "did have a preference for (age) 20. "The same questions we are br inging up were involved in that campaign," he said. Adamson said he had hoped to keep the two bills together as "companion bills," but that they had already been sent to separate committees. Speculating on the effect of the measures, Adamson said "it would be my hope that if the majority age is lowered, the age for purchase of alcohol will also be lowered." He said that this would depend on the form of the final bill, however. PREDICTIONS from former proponents of the age 19 vote last week were that attempts would be made to amend Adamson's bill to include 19-year-olds in the lowered age. "I think an attempt will be made to lower the age on both bills, " said Dave Piester, one of the leaders of Nebraskans for Young Adult Suf frage (NFYAS). Piester thinks Nebraska voters are "used to" the target age of 19, and that the issue will win or lose on" principle, not on different ages. "The reason we lost in western Nebraska was that people wanted the contractual age lowered along with the voting age," Piester said. "I THINK that by working to lower both age requirements, we will show that youth not only w ants the privilege of voting but also the responsibility," he said. If the legislature passes the measures, the contractual age will hp lnwerpd simnlv bv a vote of the body, while the voting age bill will be placed on the 1970 November general election ballot. Adamson is confident that the bills will pass through the com mittees and reach the floor of the legislature. He said that the most crucial times for legislative bills are when the bills are in committee and when they are on general file, or open for general dicussion. At both points it is possible to kill a bill before a final vote is taken. Unless a bill is highly controversial, Adamson said, it is usually passed after getting through these debates. THE HEARING on the voting age bill is set for Feb. 20, while no date has been set for the other bill. Piester said that probably a few NFYAS supporters wouid testify in behalf of these bills, as well as for one introduced by Scottsbluff Sen. Terry Carpenter, which would lower the age for consumption of 3.2 per cent beer to age 18. "Our big goal is to get everything lowered across the board to age 19," Piester said. jVei0 appointees receive Regents' approval "Perhaps Board of Regents meetings won't last ; so long under the new ad i ministration," said Regents ; President Richard Adkins as ; he adjourned a 21-minute meeting. In their brief meeting on ; Friday, Jan. 24, the Regents approved various ap ' pointments. These include the reappointment of seven ' assistant football coaches who will now receive $16,000 annually. George Kelly, the ; eighth assistant, was recom " mended for reappointment. I but had resigned earlier this month to assume a similar position at the University of Notre Dame. SEVERAL E W ap pointees to the NU staff have worldwide reputations. Dr. Ulrich Mohr, the assistant director of the German Cancer Research Center at the University of Heidelberg since 1964, will be a visiting senior professor in pathology. Mohr is one of the "world's greatest" cancer researchers, ac cording to Dr. Cecil L. Wittson, president of the University Medical Center. A graduate of the 'University of Capetown Dr. Sidney S. Mirvish received Regent approval as an associate professor of biochemistry. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge. He was a lecturer at the University of Witwatersrand and studied at Hadassah University Medical School in 1960 and 1961. IN OTHER business, the Board of Regents accepted a proposal which will provide 850 seats for the new Kim ball Concert Hall. That ap proval is contingent upon Federal approval. The University campus increased in size by 17,750 square feet. The Regents accepted the offer of the Nebraska State Historical Society Foundation to buy the land just north of the C a ther-Pound Residence Halls. This land was the last re maining parcel of land, from the dorms to Nebraska Hall, not owned by the University. Funds for the purchase came from parking fee income. THE BUDGET for the 1969 summer sessions on the Lincoln campuses w a s j scheduled for adoption, but ! was postponed until next ' month. j "The earlier the budget is j approved the better," said j acting Chancellor Merk ! Hobson. 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