POLICE REPORT-1 Beginning midnight Saturday, Sept 14 9:47 ajn. — Vehicle spray-painted, Abel-Sandoz complex parking lot, $50. 1:04 p.m.—Two men arrested for fighting, 17th and Holdrege streets. 1:25 pjn. — Man intoxicated, South Stadium, transported to detoxifi cation center, 721 K St. 2:07 p.m. — Man and woman in toxicated, Cather-Pound Residence Hall, transported to detoxification center, 721 K St. 3:08 p.m. — Woman intoxicated, Gate 24 at Memorial Stadium, trans ported to detoxification center, 721 K St. - 8:01 pjn. — Hit-and-run auto accident, west of Abel Residence Hall, $500. 10:00 p.m. — Domestic distur bance between man and woman, Harper-Schramm-Smith complex courtyard. 11:28 p.m. — Man intoxicated, Cather Residence Hall, transported to detoxification center, 721 K St. Beginning midnight Sunday, Sept 15 12:28 a.m. — Emergency tele phone mouthpiece stolen, Avery Hall, $5. 2:04 a.m. — Vehicle stolen, Westbrook Music Building park ing lot, $1,000. 1:25 p.m. — Hit-and-run auto accident, 1125 N. 16th St., $200. 3:03 p.m.—License plates stolen, parking lot at 19th and S streets, $10. 6:36 p.m.—Nuisance phone calls, Pound Residence Hall. , . j ; " . • ;■ fr ' : ■ • I Midwest Continued from Page 1 “The rationale for any major or ganization to be located on the coast was to be near commerce and big banks,” Hallett said. However, progress made in tele communications and fiberoptics in recent years has had a tremendous impact on the manner in which busi ness is transacted, Hallett said. “One can now conduct one’s busi ness from anywhere,” he said. •The cost of living in the Midwest is lower than that on the coasts, prompt ing many firms to relocate, Hallett said. • Many people arc moving to the Midwest in search of a better quality of life. Hallett painted a rosy picture for I Finally, going to college can save you some money. Bet you never thought you’d hear that. But just by being a student, you can get special prices on IBM PS/2®s—computers that will help you through school, and long after you get out. 1BM offers a variety of , PS/2 Selected Academic* Solution* models to choose from. And with an IBM PS/2 Loan for Learning, you can own one for as little as $30 a month and take up to live years to pay. 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Pickering said the center is better in structuring children’s activities than other child-care centers. “I like the way they handle the kids,” she said. “They just don’t let them play like at other centers. They actually have planned activities for them.” Donna Maranville, a kindergarten teacher at the center, stressed the benefits of incorporating university students into the kindergarten pro gram and into other programs at the the future of the Midwest region. “It will dominate the demographic growth of people and the economic growth of the nation for the next 20 years,” he said. A study released by Arizona State University in recent weeks found that Nebraska experienced the highest percentage of job growth in the na tion last year. Between June 1990 and June 1991, Nebraska had an increase of 4.73 percent, or 34,000 jobs. The city of Omaha also ranked second in the nation in terms of the percentage of job growth last year, according to the study. Nebraska’s largest city experienced a growth of 5.16 percent, 17,000 new jobs. Larry Routh, director of Career Planning and Placement at the Uni versity of Nebraska-Lincoln, attrib uted Nebraska’s job growth in part to the fact that Nebraska was not af fected by the slump in defense con center. “Most of them are very dedicated, and they have lots of enthusiasm,” she said. “You just don’t see that at other centers.” Students benefit by gaining valu able experience and by having a place to work, Maranville said. And, she said, the location of the center is fairly close to campus. Although parental fees and uni versity funding keeps the program running, Maranville said the center does not have a lot of materials to work with. “The university just doesn’t have that kind of money,” she said. However, the enthusiasm of the teachers, UNL students, and children make the funding shortages just a little easier to take, she said. tract work, which has hit some state economies. He also said that agribusiness, much of which is based in Nebraska, is experiencing relatively good times. Despite the job increase, Routh was quick to put the numbers in per spective. “While there is job growth here, it isn’t an open market,” he said. “There are a lot of people that want to be here (in Nebraska). It’s still very competi tive.” Recent activity in UNL’s Career Planning and Placement office ap pears to support Halletl’s claims on the movement to the Midwest. Routh said UNL graduates who live in coastal cities have called his office and are interested in moving back to Nebraska. Most of those requesting informa tion cited the stale’s quality of life and educational system as incentives for returning, Routh said. h'