The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 14, 1976, 3RD DIMENSION, Page page 4, Image 16

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. . . then there's the other side of the coin.
Maybe your education has trained you to be
bright, perceptive, and possibly worldly. But not
to make money.
Enter the large-bucks-fast fraternity. More and
more students are joining it, forced into the field
of manual labor because of finances. They come
home with their hands dirty. And muddy shoes.
It has its advantages, construction, assembly
line work does. Such as an $8 to $10 an hour
wage or being in the $1 ,200 a month income
bracket with overtime. That computes to $14,000
a year, about average salary of a Ph.D. if he finds
ajob.
Not too bad for four years of school and a
little sweat . . .
thssrsday, October 14, 1976
third dimension
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