The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 17, 1975, Page page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i
1
i
!
1
I
I
I
fi
Grim
s
summer
employment
picture for Lincoln students
Pv Siarid Peito
One UN-L student spent two weeks
scrounging for a job but he only found an
opening as a receptionist at a beauty parlor.
Maybe he better grab the job because his plight
typifies the summer employment scene.
"Without any doubt" there are fewer jobs
available this year than last, said Mrs. Jacque
Baiuch, operations manager for the Lincoln Job
Service.
A Job Service of Nebraska report said the
only jobs available long are low paying andor
have high requirements. The report said 43
percent require speciali7ed education, training
and experiencef The figures are for Firimore,
Lancaster, Saline, Seward and York Counties.
Reflects economy
Mrs. Baiuch said the situation reflects the
economy. She said major companies that have
laid off employes are still not hiring or just
rehiring laid off workers. ,'
The Job Service report said there were 4,760
applicants seeking work in May, an increase of
400 from April. The figure includes 200 people
who want part-time jobs ami slightly over 300
that need summer work.
Unemployment in Lancaster County , was 6
per cent in April compared with the 3 per cent
rate a year ago. A slight drop in unemployment
was expected for May followed by a raise in June
when students left the classrooms, said the
report. .
Much ingenuity
Referring to students, the report said, "Some
will have to use much ingenuity in creating jobs
on their own."
Jobs for college students are also "slim" at
UNL, said Doug Severs, employment coordinator
for UNL. The Scholarships and Financial Aids
office, which lists jobs on and off campus,
receives an average of 10 to 15 job openings a
week compared with the 26 a week averaged last
summer, he sa;d. '
Jobs that open up, he. said, are usually "gone
by the end of the day."
Can't find work
"I have more students coming to me and
telling me they can't find work," he said.
u..,.,, thoro maw bfe more university jobs
available with the start of the new r fiscal year
July 1, he said. This is when new budgets go into
effect
Severs said that this month, with old budgets
coming to an end, university departments may
find themselves short of money so they are not
hiring. With more money available after July i,
he said, there should be more jobs.
College has edge
Severs and Mrs. Baiuch both said college
students have an edge over high school students
in getting jobs. Mrs. Baiuch said college students
have the experience and the age. Federal
regulations require workers to be 18 for factory
ro construction jobs.
But the number of college students requesting
jobs at her office is down from other years, she
said. Apparently students not from Lincoln have
gone home because without work they can't
support themselves here, she said.
Temporary help
A spokesman for a firm providing temporary
help for businesses said they have increased the
number of college students they employ by
about 10 per cent. These 30 to 40 students fill-in
for absent or vacationing employes on an "on
call" basis, she said.
Students not finding full-time jobs may have
turned to this work, she said, because they
decided temporary jobs were better than none.
Those $6 and more per hour construction jobs
are close this summer. One paymaster said, "We
have a steady stream (of young men) coming in
the door" and we have to turn them down. He
said company hiring is down 75 per cent and
there is hardly enough work to keep regular
employes busy.
City jobs
The city management hasn't cut down on it's
summer employment, but those 700 jobs were
filled by mid April, said Harvey Schwartz,
personnel officer for Lincoln.
City summer work is usually replacing
vacationing employes, he said. About 1,000
people apply every year but only 150 are hired
new, he said, the rest are rehired from previous
summers.
Teaching Jobs Open
Vf- ....1 "k ' v , i -
With 107 nuclear powered ships now operating and 40 more on the way, the U.S. Navy is
the largest operator of nuclear power plants in the world. As the foremost expert in nuclear
power, the Navy needs talented instructors at our Nuclear Power Schools.
Instructors in basic science and nuclear technology are needed. Applicants must have BS
degree, although postgraduate degrees are preferred.
New instructors receive direct appointment as a Navy Ensign and 5 weeks of training and
briefing-no boot camp. Starting salary is apprsximstcly $10,000 or mora) plus all military
benefits including free medical and dental care, 30 days paid vacation and unlimited paid
sick leave. .
Instructors receive approximately $17,000 a year during their fourth year of teaching duty.
Instructors teach officers and enlisted men going through the nuclear training program at
Mare island, California Of Uriando, Fiorida-no tea duty.
All qualified applicants are personally interviewed by Admiral Rickover, Director Naval
Reactors, '
Math, Physics, Chemittry, Engineering
Requirements
Education degree in math, physics
engineering or other
technicalscientific
field
Age 19 to 27
Sax male or female
If you're qualified and interested, contact the Placement
Office in the Nebraska Union for further details or write
Navy Officer Program, Suite 400, 6910 Pacific, Omaha
NE 68106.
Openings avsikbb for thosa qualified
I
!
J
m . . wrm mm
Ve Boafls MotDer
17th G R
475-4426
Spscial$30 perms?
$20 - includes haircut
in
.JiA
10th & VAN DORN
1Q discount
,.- -- -- -
to all university students
Single Admission $3 Season Membership $10
name: - - - ' "
address
city
.state.
.zip.
Nebraska Rcpsrtoiy Ihsztw 75
co HOWELL THEATRE
12th & R Ctrc-ts
Lincoln, NE
summer nebraskan
tuesday, june 17, 1976