THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Friday, March 14, 1952 Mawaiians AfNU Want Statehood By SHIRLEY MURPHY Staff Writer Hawaii should become a state. Elaine Kagawa, Kenneth Naka gawa and Ella Miyamoto, Univ- Time Senior Editor Gives Round-Up Of 'Younger Generation1 Compilation (Keillor's Not: The fullowlnn la a letter (mm eenlor Tim fiif ouf a Questionnaire that nskerf snme rrfttv maratlne editor Henry Grunwald to Richard E. tnflcy. rdu- 1111 "ul " questionnaire inai aSKea some preuy TTnitpH States because thev be-l,tt"onal bu" director, Tim maaiin-, nivinic a rciund-nu of personal questions. It was much the same all over, uniiea ouieb ueuuse tuejr ue h(w 4JnmmUd nd , itjlf( tom1e(1 xime'e report on the , , , , lieved in freedom." "Voimxer tieneration.- Other correspondents were able to get groups like """In World War II," Miss Kag- I was very pleased to learn that our cover story this together in their areas, also. And professors, awa added, "many boys volun-on the "Younger Generation" was such a success youth counselors, the clergy, businessmen, all were teered as quickly as possible to ersity students from Hawaii, agree prove that the Hawaiians were on this point. "We should have the right to become a state," Miss Kagawa said. "Hawaiian workers and parents pay the same federal taxes people in the United States do." Nakagawa said, "We are not actually citizens because Hawaii is not a state. Our delegates in Congress cannot vote, yet we subscribe to laws of (he United States just as the states do." Sen. Tom Connolly, Texas Democrat, recently made a re mark that he was a better Ameri can than a great many of the peo ple in Hawaii. He was speaking in regard to the Hawaiian state hood bill, recently sent back to a Congressional subcommittee. Because of Connolly's state ment, a delegation is leaving Hawaii for Washington, D.C. to request an apology from the sen ator. Four World War II veter ants and gold-star mother are among the delegates. Miss Kagawa, Nakawaga and Miss Miyamoto said they did not know what prompted Connolly's remark, but it was "humiliating." Nakawaga said, "in many in stances, Hawaii is far more pro gressive" than many states he has visited. "In Hawaii, there is no dis crimination between races. The islands are a true melting pot of the world. People are not discriminated against in social life, business or marriage," he said. not for the Japanese cause. They proved themselves to be good Americans then and have con tinued to prove their allegiance through the Korean war." "We feel the war as keenly as any American," Nakagawa said. "Whenr papers arrive from home, almost every issue car ries a story about one of the boys from home that was a Korean casualty." The students feel that Hawaii helps bear the national expense of war in men and money, just as much as individual states. Miss Miyamoto and Nakagawa on the newsstands and that the Circulation Depart- equally accessible and willing to speak out about ment received such a- surprisingly large number their pet theories on Youth. of requests for reprints. It is this kind of favorable Here's Ogle's first report on his doings out in reaction from our readers that makes the effort Denver: we put into it all the more worthwhile. For a combination of reasons I decided on And a great deal of effort it was. In the Edl- this query to concentrate on rural areas. Just 'East Battles West' In KSCs 'Chi Crazy' torial Section alone, 21 of us spent the better part of 18 weeks, planning, querying, interview ing and distilling the flood of information we uncovered. This had to be done before we could even begin to write the story itself. You asked for a fill-in on the mechanics and touching the metropolitan area in the region Denver. I decided that with the bulk of your re search coming from more representative large cities than Denver, the rural touch would be valuable. ' While in , Gunnison, Colo., I worked out an aspects of the whole project. Well, here it is, the interview questionnaire with the college there way I saw it here in the Time and Life building, (western state of Colorado), sat in on a couple of Tfie Beginning sessions, set up arrangements to have about " - - . - - kum.jq.,. gvtlbl U.1VI. 114 bill Hlba AlibCl stressed the opportunities in You might say the "Younger Generation" story " r Jf" ? f " olca. Hawaii and the advantages for . , . . u, , t nA Viewed. A psychiatrist, a minister, a sociologis mwan ana tne advantages ioribegan at a lunch table when Henry Luce and . -.,., .' ,,,. v. the islands and America if Hawaii becomes a state. "Hawaii's production would not ruin industries in the United States," Nakagawa said. "Ameri can industries have competition between each other and Hawaii would not disrupt business." The students said Hawaii is becoming increasingly popular as a vacation spot for Ameri cans. "The number grows each year," Nakagawa said. "Sixty two thousand tourists have re served accommodation through the year in Hawaii and many are being turned away." Immigration has been one of the disputed points about Hawai ian statehood, according to the students. Nakagawa said that by the next The three students agreed that generation, there will be few im the educational standards are J migrants to the islands except for higher in Hawaii than in some the Filipino plantation workers. American states. Miss Kagawa He added that 86 percent of the said she believed every Hawaiian citizens in Hawaii are Americans who volunteered to serve inl "With greenery the year round,! in New England, in the deep South, in Texas' fiflH nn nllimni OntiliTirtts Artnirv rmr Mil assistant managing editor Otto Fuerbiw were . & ai.:uUiB me - 4 . the western slope of Colorado. Western State col some not so good young people were making- he has about J basketball scandals, the fr.ghtenmg narcotics situ- at Grand Ju around ation, the big-time football issue, declining col- lege attendance, and the war in Korea. Story Takes Shape These were aspects of the younger generation At the end of two weeks, the story began to that everybody pretty well knows about. But what take shape. Actually our first thought was to carry of the "Younger Generation" itself? What were a box-score of the regional reports. We felt certain they thinking? What do they believe? Who are that young people in one locality would be quite their heroes? What are their ambitions? How do different from those in another. By cities, we they see themselves and their times? planned to report what youth was doing and say- These questions Luce and Fuerbringer asked jng, what its aims and ambitions were, how its each other. And later Barron Beshoar, News Bu reau Deputy Chief, was asking the same of our correspondents in Denver, New Orleans, Wash ington, Chicago, Atlanta, Sai Francisco, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston and Dallas. The story was in the making. City by city, campus by campus, and from rural areas as well, the reports came in. We learned what youth was saying everywhere in the U.S. World War II was well-educated. I an average of 75 degrees Fahren "Our boys have volunteered in!heit temperature, sunshine and World War I, World War II and! soft ocean trade winds," Naka the Korean war," Miss Kagawa 'gawa said, "Hawaii could be a said. "They fought with the j businessman's paradise." 'Round The Campus Theta Xi's, Beta Sigs In Weekend Spotlight brand new cities, in the Mid-West, and on the West Coast. We spoke to young people in training camps and training schools on 'he business front and on tastes ran, its opinions on politics, the war, jobs, the older generation just about everything that affects its lives, and activities, today. But we had set our course too early, for in combing through the reams of teletyped copy we received here in New York, we were struck by the unanimity of what youth, all over the coun try, had to say. This samenes of outlook the ' attitude toward achievement and failure, the resignation of the group was the big surprise of the entire undertaking. The pattern was unmis takable, ' And so all our plans changed. Rather than use the war-front in Korea. We suddenly found our- the "box-score" idea, we compiled the results, Connie Gordon The news of the weekend con-Harry Giesselman and Judy Sehn cerns sweethearts and dream ert; Bruce Holmquist and Donna girls. The Theta Xi's are holdingMaaske; Lou Selk and Marian their annual Dream Girl dance' McCulloch; Larry Ebner and at the Cornhusker hotel. Dream girl finalists are Jodie Grogan, Lynn Albers Joyce Shaner. Dates to the formal include: Lewis Pen n o c k and Miss Grogen; George Schantz and Jo Johnson; Dave Knapp Gordon and Liz Moodie; Lenie Seaton and Miss Shaner; Jim Tighe and Betty Hall; Everett Jen kins and Mary Lou Cooper; Bob Albers and Bea Beutel; Chuck Rossow and Lynn Kun kel; Denny Mitchen and Miss Albers; Larry Poppa and Janet Rogers; Ron Dreamer and Marti Hill; Dick Brodfueher and Pat Schmid; Marlin Bree and Marge Hallis; Pete Schmitt and Joyce Lease; Walt Christiansen and Jean Sweeney; Jack Moore and Betty Lester; Paul Becker and Barb Gilmore. Rosemary Paul; Miss Niehaus and Walt Flicker; Miss White and Bill Renner; Miss Gove and Dick Buls; Miss Bean and Gene Miller. e Nebraska Dclts will be hosts Saturday night at a house party for Delts attending- the regional convention here. Blind dates for about 60 fellows were arranged by the campus chapter. The Delt combo will furnish music. Congratulations are in order for selves in the survey business. On The Right Trail had become a mountain of statistics and impres sions that seemed to grow by the hour in scope and made it a general survey on youth as a whole. The story ran. Having said our piece we closed the books, we thoucht. on this crour nf oeonle we had What Degan as an aimost routine iuuiciu, nicknamed tne silent Generation." But somewhere along the line, this "Silent Opnpration" annarpntlv found its vnirp. So far vjp significance. We knew we were on the trail of have received tearsheets of editorials that appear- By JAN HARRISON Staff Writer New York, N.Y. versus Custer ville, Ariz. Will Molly give in to Danny and be content to live in a little penthouse on top of a tall New York buidir..? Or will Molly carry Danny away on her spotted broncho, out to the land of sage brush and cattle rustlers? To learn the answer. to these questions, all one has to do is see the Kosmet Klub's spring show, "Girl Crazy," April 24 and 25. Molly, a young girl, played by Mimi DuTeau, is a product of the wide open spaces and has little knowledge of the east and the people who live there. When Danny, (Nick Amos) an eastern Dlavbov. arrives i.i the western Arizona town at the request of his scandal-averting father, and plops right in the middle of Molly's life, the old saying of "riastis east and west is west and never the twain shall meet" is gloriously falsified as the two find themselves in love. The conflict of which part of the country they want to live in turns into a major feud, as Danny tries to convince Molly that New York is the only place. Molly has her wn ideas about residence and all of them In clude Custerville. The comedy interest ci the show is in the form of one Gic.jer Goldfarb, (Hank Gibson) who is the hack-driver who brings Danny to the golden west. Gieber stumbles into politics in the little community and is elected local sheriff. Two gamblers, Kate and Slick Fothergill (Marilynn Lehr and Herb Jackman) make it plenty rough for Gieber, and he begins to feel that to remain in Custerville would be slightly un healthy. Gieber also runs into trouble with two local desperados who have taken a dislike to his face. To further complications, poor Gieber has become the object of the affections of Miss Patsy West, who finds, after trying her best, that he is a hard man to pin down. As the plot progresses, Molly and Danny are joined by a third character, Sam Mason (Ned Conger), and raucous humor is furnished by Flora James (Nancy Dark), Tess Parker (Mary Kay Tolliver Downing), and Jake Howerl (Marvin Stromer). All this and Gershwin too!! What more do you want??? Sale Of 'Street Scene1 Tickets To Start Tuesday something and we told the guys to get it. I wish, Dick, we could have had a full issue for the report. The wires sent in by the news staff were stories in themselves. As an example, take this one cable which Bob Macey sent in from Tokyo after he talked with the men In Ko rea. Beside a quonset hut at Kimpo airport one morning this week, over 100 tired unshaven in fantrymen lolled in dust, waiting for planes to take them to Tokyo. For some, Tokyo meant the first group were pretty much in agreement as you know leg of a trip home. For some it meant only a tern- from the Letters Department reports. Those dis- porary break in the dirty business of war, five senting did so most energetically as you will see days of "rrr and rrr." To them all it meant was from reading parts of their letters which I have hot showers and steaks cooked to order. They had included below. However, the dissention seemed no yarns to swap with others. No desire to learn to be directed at the facts we brought to light ra- ed in 85 college papers. And hundreds of "Letters to the Editor." Acording to the Circulation Department, we re ceived 1,259 letters from young people, school superintendents, college presidents, parents and teachers asking for some 63,000 reprints of the article itself. 'Silent Generation' Replies The majority of the comments from the younger rr .1.1. . i wc new luwiiB ciuo Kins wno tu-n tua ,irlj u, t ,.. i ir tit i I1UUJ.C Ulan nitjr oucauj nutn puvub w in were initiated last Monday eve- ica. The Sergeant who had spent 13 months in Ko- ning in Ellen Smith hall. The new active members are: Beverly Norris; Anna Marie Ober imeyer; Nadine Osborn; Mary Ann jSchlegel; Winifred Stolz; Bonnie JTianco; Mary Waltz; Kathy Welch; uoroiny Yates. The Beta Sigs are also pre-j A scholarship award was pre senting their sweetheart at their sented to sophomore Jane Heth Sweetheart dance, Saturday eve- ertington by a representative of ning at the Lincoln hotel. the Towne club Mothers club. Beta Sig sweetheart finalists. This award was presented for Dorothy Ahlgrim; Georgia Baker; 'rea said, "For 15 months guys have been running ffiacf "iShSrsffi; BS:ivn,d ,dor rTtains getting fannies neman; Phyllis Brown; Barbara fuI1 of lead- And what have we Proved? The next Daniel; Elaine Eddy: Lois Eddy; time this boy fights to defend anybody's country Joan Follmer; Iilene Frailey; Ruth: it will damn well be his own." One of the officers Green; Beverly Jackson; Joan k d. ..y Seoul' Well I'd hate for that Joyner; Natalie Katt; Phyllis , u " . e ' e Ior ttlat Keim. i to be Decatur, 111. This may not be the way, but Pat King; Sharon Kreuch; Fran- Munich wasn't the way either." rtrtr. T rn 1.. HIT 1 .1 -ca ucatuis, iviaiieiie lueinxe i-f - n . t if Carole Moistad; Liia Newbiii; No Time For Reading In Korea are Laverne Bean, Audrey Gove, Ann White, and Mary Jean Nie haus. Some of the Beta Sigs and their elates will be: Dean Sheer and What they want now is a hom and chance to live there. Young GIs read very little in Korea and practically no news of domestic politics. He.'s for less government and lower taxes. His experience in Korea made him less international minded. He is Indignant about corruption in gov ernment, suspicious of both parties, stoutly in sists he will vote independent. Actually, young people were most cooperative in talking to us about themselves. Ed Ogle out in Denver had no trouble In getting 150 students to the highest scholarship during her freshman year in the Uni versity. Conyr.ltuL'ltinns nt-n in nrrir.i (nr Jai Jraney; Dick Bauermcister and Katy Coad and Hank Cech who! A A T I T Mary Lou Ginn; Darwin McAfee; are now a steady deal. Also going WlOVm KODDSOD I O and Mary Ann Grundman; Jim steadv are Rosemary Castner and IWMIIWWII IV WIC Koepke and Marilyn Stelling; , Bill Waldo. A T II f I O OSt M AA mh iaiK ounaay o;ou r.ri. ther than at Time's presentation of these facts. Here are some pertinent comments excerpted from these replies. "... I disagree when you say that we are the lost generation. Mister, we aren't the lost genera tion, we've been mislaid. When the history books are written ... I hope they will remember the ones of us that did our best to try to crowd a lifetime of peaceful living before an inevitable clash with Communism . . . And surely they will not forget the ones of the mislaid generation who rave part of themselves in the Korean war." Donald P. Grant, University of Alabama ". , . Your staff hit the main issues. Hit them accurately and analyzed th-m well. Much of the article might have been tape-recorded at a dormi tory bull session." Charles Feit and Joseph Davis, Rolling it all up, I think the important thing about this project is not all the stir and reaction we have caused but rather that we do this sort of coverage at all. This isn't the first time we have stuck our editorial neck out, as you well know. And I'm sure it won't be the last. Tickets for the University Thpatpr's nroduction of "Street Scene" will be on sale beginning Tupsdav. The show will he pre cpntpH at thp Nebraska theater Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, March 25 and 26. Students who have season tickets may begin reserving seats Tuesday. The Theater's box office at the Temple build ing will be open from 12 noon until 4:45 p.m. Tuesday through Fiiday, March 21. Saturday, March 22, box office hours will be 10 a.m. to 12 noon and Mon day, March 23, it will be open from 12 noon i-.ntil 4:45. Tickets may also be bought and reserved at the Nebraska theater box office each day of the show from 12 noon until curtain time at 8 p.m. Individual tickets are $1.25 each. According to Dallas Williams, director of University Theater, "it it wise to reserve seats early." NU BULLETIN BOARD "Street Scene," Elmer Rice's Pulitzer Prize winner, shows lower class life in East Side New York in 1929, Williams t said. Violence and passionate emotions characterize the play, he added. Members of the cast include the following: Mary Sidner, Lester Marthis, Marian Uhe, Marjorie Line, Janis McCaw, Harry Stiver, Kenneth Clement, Hamilton How ard, Harriet Ewing, Curtis Siem ers, Richard Marrs, Donald Sil verman, Ormand Meyer. Gail Wellensick, Patricia Loder, John Lange, Ann Griffis, Christine Phillips, Charles Peterson, Pris- cilla Gould, Jack Wenstrand, Van . Hansen. Jo Hinds, John Churchill, Jim Adams, Bill Anderson, John Rob son, Walter Everett, Herb Wilms, Charles Rossow, George Strassler. Charles Huestis, Shirley Fries. James Walton, Ilene Frailey, Nancy Dark, Mn tha Picard, Janice Harrison, Maxine Zimmer man, James Ehret and Robert Hoig. Cowles. Friday State tournament dance, Union ballroom, 9-12 p.m. Admission 60 cents. Saturday Applications for University scholarships due in Room 104, Administration building. State tournament dance, Union ballroom, 9-12 p.m. Admission 60 cents. Sunday "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Union film society film, Esquire theater, 4:30 p.m. Monday Robert Crosby and Victor An derson speak at 2 n.m. in Union ballroom. Spend Your Sunday Evenings at the NEW ITALIAN VILLAGE 2-6651 Corner "O" Street at 58th Sam TEST MARCH 29 Scholarship Applications Due At Noon Saturday Deadline for filin? scholarshiD apphcation3 is noon Saturday, Dr.lshit) aw.,rcls ca-nmiuo inHnn,..-, ,nc U,e r,,,l,t,r w T. J. Thompson, dean of student . P. dW'ircs co.nmittee, indepen- N,1fPm;m'K l)mn, affairs nnH rhair-m tk. font awards and College of Ann- "Man in ih n...n" i eral scholarship awards commit- !'ultVrc4 scholarships and giants-1 m;iny well-known pieces of con tee, announced Thursday. jin-aid total approximately 4:t0, Jtcmporiiry art in 1he NAA's March 'Elie Nadlcman American will discuss the production of the ! Sculptor." will be the topic of a film before the screening. 'gallery talk Sunday at 3:30 p.m in Morrill hall, Gallery B. Marvin Robinson, trustee of the Nebraska Art association, will be the speaker. Robinson, who has made a special study of Nadlrman's work, will Illus trate his talk with slides show- ork. Red Cross Unit iGives Prologue Students who have not taken the reneral comprehensive scholarship examination must do o before they are eligible for scholarships Dr. Thompson said. Home students who have taken tiie test will be required to take it apain. The examination will be given The Red Cross College Unit helped give the 1952 Red Cross is one of the nesday evening at the Cornhusker . nntoi, according to Joan Hanson, ItCCU president. nmons me awards are .100 ;siiow, now on exhibition In the ine Kll.li presented pro i'niversity RercnU scholarships I University nit Rulleries. i eram entitled "We'll Be There." worth $100 each. The Regents are A full-color film. ' tne lycuend of i The production was a dramatic Queztzalcnatl," will bn shown, prologue that highlighted some Tuesday, March 18 at 8:30 p.m., I of the work that Is belnt done given on the basis of scholastic standing and results of the com prehensive test. Grants-in-aid are awarded according to these two criteria plus financial need. in Gallerv B This Toltre legend is retold in the movie with Tarasran fig- Saturday morning, March 29, at 8 in at the office of the dean of stu a.m. in several different rooms on 'dent affair.", Room 101, Admin campus. Tncse who have not had istration building. Applications are to be turned urines from the Stendahl rollec by Red Cross units all over the world. Prologue leads were Marvin 'rnmpr njirriitnr' Tf.irript Wink tlon, which the most complete, iHcd Cr()ss ,r. Ernest Bebb ljrst private col ect on of Mexican Boldicr. Jim Tracy second soi. art In the Ln.tcd Stalet. djcr; Hob pretand( organist. i-rouueea oy xne rinrmn arm ri oth(.p mmh(.s nf the cast were all inform them of the iows: iwas directed by liny Wisnefskl q Anderson 'line Madden Pat -hnmLnn ,aC "i Dr- Thompson, chairman; Jose-l,nd Photographed by Richard, Forsythe, Sally McGlasson, Bev- s whc i Lit the test phine Bro(,ks. associate professor Lawrence. , j Davj Marilyn Lnne Janet revTnn, veir wHl re- home economics; Elvera Chris-' " .ml'f.tiLeiTpkcs Lola Foss. Marlene Dum- ine lesi wnj te given cards at tne. Members of the ceneral srholar- TtecardTwi aWqrd;i commiUee aie as fol- departments of UCLA, the film Ma'nlvn 'Hnmcr,Eilicn Mullarkey ?e.cfrrlU I"?, them of the lows: was directed by liny Wisnefsk sn Andprsfin Madden Pm ing to Dr Th Applicants durinir a r.rvins vear will r. ""me economics; r-ivera unns- " 7. " ' ZrLul.Z. ,lu ,TrKCS, Lola ceive a care T in the mail tell ne l?n; assistant professor of ' . ' ymveiwiy i". ke, Norma Cnrse, Penny Reese, them whether or not they are re- i5?,1,03 educatio fof , women; - 'w Jean Henzel, Carly Rogers, Marian quired to retake the examiha-!uclllc 9yprcal?sen' assistant pro-. Ed ClOSS Travels iMcCulloch, Harriet Harvey, Lois tion. Dr. Thompson explained.fess)r bP.e--h and speech cor-. The Education 1 10 class of Rus-!.Tean Olson, Wilma Kindhart, Faye however, 1hat anyone who wishes r!c ; Mn ?r'm Johnston, dean sell McCrei?ht visited the kinder-Graham, Donna Elliott, Paula Wit to may take the test. He added i ? women: yUs Wade. Pofesso,r.ofigarten class at Randolph grade hey, Virginia Poppe and Bill that many students take the ex-looler a"d anatomy; C. C. Wig- R(.hool Tuesday, March 11. iWeber. timinafi-.n - ,.,nnH flmo 4r. cm If P "".-ssur oi jiorucuiiure, USE DAILY NEBRASKAN To place a classified ad Slop In lli llimlneH Office Room 20 Student Union CmII 2-76.11 En. 4226 for CWI fled Srrvir Hours 1-4:30 Man. thru frl THRIFTY AD RATES No. word! 1 dayl2 days 3 dayi 4 day 1 week 1 -1 OlZL-40 UL' 5 8JlU0jj1.20 11-15 -50 j XOJ 1.05 J 1 25 J1.45 10-20 J .t3 1.U3 1.50 1,70 21-25 j .70 j 1.101.43 1.75J1.95 2C-30 j .80 j 1.25 j 1.G5 2.00 2.20 EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITIES in All Fields of Engineering available In expanding diver tided programi including: Guided Missiles Supersonic Aircraft Rocket Motors Airborne Electronic Equipment they havs improved or to find out n o l t c I their general intelligence scores. DrSWer, Keed lO Speak Results of the test may be ob- t Carv,Q-i ,, d,:,:-, tained by each student .t the of- To elementary Principals flee of Henry M. Cox, director of Dr. Madison Brewer, professor the bureau of Instructional re- lof elementary education and Dr. search, Temporary A. Calvin H. Reed, assistant profes- Dr. Thompson advised scholar- sor of elementary education, will ship applicants to keep Saturday participate in the elementary morning, March 29, free even school principals clinic, March though they may nave taken the 15, in the Union, test before. I Dr. Brewer will speak on "The The comprehensive examination Role of an Elementary School will also be given at the College of Principal." Dr. Heed will head a Mfjfjlne In Omaha March 29,' panel discussion concerned with Dr. Thompson said. the problems of elementary school Scholarships and grants-in-aid principals. ATTENTION LIBERAL THINKERS YOU or invited to hear Dr. Curtii W. Ri, famous American Liberal Preacher and Dean ol Abraham Lincoln Center. Chicago. Illinoii, discuss. "AMERICA'S ROLE IN WORLD AH AIRS" LINCOLN UNITARIAN CHURCH 12th and K 11:00 A.M.. Sunday, March It BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES OjtilriKi ffT college men during Muinmrr. Hun Haleimen i vncntlnni on whutegalft bread routes, or attaint BfiltmnniKr In otflce. Munt b court(u, reaponnlbl LOST AND FOUND LOST lu rimmed rUnhm. Ilrlwatn Social Science building and llurncu, Frl day at 11. Juann Miller, 2-7B7S. and if driver. Owl wagee. Box S.l rriaT i..,.,.h.,.i. on.n.1 Uland, N.bra.ka. Give full da- Tr.'n "Z''LJ??''1. ..M . ...... ... ...... .. .......vi. nl,u w,alMi, piun day. William Baad. 6-6080. MISCELLANEOUS KAIHVLANO ORKENUOIJBB. Open nincn and Sunday. 6': IS "O." Call - 6-2H72. I II LOST Bulova watch, Boy'n Ret Room, - - iiiuinnttv, HKuin to the DAILY NEUHASKAN at (Ice. LIBERAL REWARD. ANYONB who hw the accident Involvlnc C'hrli Heck a Wcliun ami a 1X02 Kord nn Ilia .nrn nt l'Jth find If Mulnrdfiv. Murrh 1, et auuut 0:20 P. 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