daily nebraskan Wednesday, april 13, 1977 nis ruiremems v 5 plQQq 96 on 0 1 5 xx v;o 00 cdsb&tcs Bob Dovanoy's Mrthday 5 That's noro than tha lsgisl&twa Trill d:! , I Tubrg Cans 351 n Tonight, Wei April 13 T!E LINCOLN JAZZ SOCIETY Presents I - E : - - k. , - Jtt.-Utt.- JMiarfcl THADJ0X2S&SL LEWIS CSCKiSTRA AprillS 800PM ODonnell Auditorium Nebraska V&sleyan Campus Reserved Seats $4.50 in advance $5.50 day of show Available at Dirt Cheap Records 217 No.11th Lincoln. Ne. 6S503 and at the door the night of the concert Supported, by a grant from the Nebraska Arts Council Vo'vo Qrorn up tn 16 yrsT Projects in 70 countries that you choose. 2 yrs. service, 48 day paid vacation, free trans portation, $3000 plus termination pay, non competitive U.S. Civil Service Status. Senior & Grads with majors in the Sciences, Education, Engineering, Architecture and Language Arts, sign up for an interview. April 19, 20 and 21. Placement Office Nebraska Union. ' Background or Majors in . Home Ec and Agriculture, see Lester Breidenstein, Ag Hall Rm. 101 C. Ph, 472-2373 East Campus MTWF 8-11 a.m. M & W 1-3 p.m. f FAOILV 'A Dinner includes 1 Too, 2 Enchiladas, Qips and Bess j n 'no u u Cash Locations A!.!cfFi::!a ikmm V-: , .iu til i.wivJ TM uh i,.rj -7 IT'S V 5 n . By Janet Lliteras What does it take to be a Nebraska resident? Debbra Hoy, a first-year law student at the NU Law College, said she has lived in Nebraska all her life, but be cause she left the state for 1 1 months she must pay non resident tuition. Hoy, 24, charges that the state statutes establishing residency requirements is unconstitutional and is suing the NU Board of Regents for the $1 200 tuition difference, plus 6 per cent interest. , "The statute can't be enforced evenly," Hoy said. "It's impossible for the university to check out and confirm each person." She said she knows of non-resident law stu dents who pay resident tuition rates. The present statute, passed in 1973, requires all non residents to pay non-resident tuition. According to John Gourlay; general counsel for NU, residency is determined by the student's relation to another person, such as parents. Resident parents Students are entitled to resident rates because their parents are residents, Gourlay explained. As the law now stands, he explained, if a family moves to Nebraska with an 18- and 20-year-cld college student, the minor will pay in-state tuition rates, but the 20-year-old is considered a non-resident and must pay non resident tuition. Residency also is determined by the student's intent, whether he or she intended to live in or leave the state permanently, he said, and by the student's relation to the state, which covers students of legal age and those with no legal guardian. This part of the student pertains to Hoy, he said. By state law, those eligible for resident tuition must be a registered voter in Nebraska, pay state and local taxes the year before admission or own a house in the state. Hoy admits she wasn't a registered voter before enter ing law school. She and her husband were in New Mexico for 1 1 months. "When a person is here 23 years, is gone for 11 months, comes back and is not a resident; it's as if I've never been here," she said. . : rJ Nebraska education - She said she attended school in Nebraska. She graduated from Nebraska Wesley an University, majoring in political science, worked at UNLin 1975 and paid resi dent tuition, rates for UNL graduate courses in political science. Her parents have lived here all their lives, she added. . Hoy said she never intended to leave the state per manently. When she came back to Nebraska in the fall 1976, she said, she tried to apply for resident tuition rates, but her application was turned down. She asked the residency . office to reconsider, but was again denied . residency rates. Gourlay declined to discuss the merits of "the case before it vent to court, but he said he reviewed Hoy's application for residency and looked at it "quite care fully" before he turned her down. He said he thinks the university's decision was a proper one and told Hoy the only other avenue of appeal open to her was through the courts. The statutes spell out every individual case in detail, he said. The university "attempts to interpret and apply th rules inacted by the (Nebraska) Legislature" as fairly as possible, he explained. dine, William, Wright, Johnson and Oldfather, a Lincoln law firm, will defend the university. ' Don Stenberg, Hoy's attorney said the court battle probably will be in eight to 12 months, "if things take their normal course." htzrt treating , , yosr broth '. 'and sisters like brothers and sisters : lM AMERICAN UFE M-lr Vfttir ffuM tAMA.iM tV'. v xm r& r. r -. v-i UUWNUNUfcJK. DOUGLAS 3 Everyone's Running to Jewelart! SAILG SflS am Lata LJ iLai I VkwJ Ml J s; 3 mm u Air Force ROTC has scholarships, allowances and jobs for selected science and engineering majors. ' Air Force ROTC has openings for young men and women majoring in specified science and engineering academic fields. Fields such as Aeronautical, Aerospace, General and Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, Physics and Computsr Technology. AFROTC enrollment pays well now and could keep ' paying off in the future. Air Force ROTC offers 4-year, 3-year and 2-year scholarships with $100 monthly tax-free allowance. AFROTC also offers the $100 tax-free monthly allowance during the last two years to non scholarship students. Upon graduation you'll receive a com mission in the U.S. Air Force and compete for challenging jobs. There's ' be numerous opportunities for advanced education in your field, - plus you II have financial security and start your way up the pro motion ladder where your ability and ambition are t?it cr.!y limits. It pays to be in demand, and if you're the type we're looking for, it pays to get the details. No obligations, naturally. f.3f llcrtry Julstsr 2C3 M Si f J Ckf 3. 472-2473 c Af y Vy V v tn JJ:(' ; , j r 1