h This Coupon jf ! Worth 0 Q All new Jewelry All Custom-Mad Jewelry D All Estate Jewelry 1 m Jewelry Impeded and Cleaned Fjre 1 5055 Of! Your g First Jewelry Repair 0 13 Q Q a i i i 0 DICK'S 'JEI9ELBY 0 I & LOAN I 9090' Street I 1 4744007 B Shop Sunday Afternoons. Creativity IE ADS TOGETHER Creative, designs fay or KHb y Their experience , id show on you n r a $ PERM & CU Expires Juy 30h 475-4S02 17th & R Shorts 7'";" The Dow Chemical Com pany of Midland, Mich., has established an annual scholarship program that will benefit three College of Agriculture students at UNL this fall. The initial $1,500 gift, through University Founda tion, will enable the col lege to award $500 Dow Scholarships to three stu dents. The chemical com pany asked that recipients be sophomores, Nebraska high school graduates, and be enrolled in agronomy, entomology or integrated pest management. Go for it, Dad! Give me a hand, Mom! Families can have fun at the Wil lard Family Olympics Fri day, June 22 at 7:30 p.m. at the Willard Commun ity Center. Potluck dinner starts at 6:30. Children will spend the week prac ticing for the Friday event which will include soft ball throw for distance and accuracy, family relays and other not-too-serious events such as a whis tling contest. Call 475 0805 for more information. YOU A WRITTEN UARAMTEG WHEN IT COMES TO SELECTION. QUALITY, BRAND NAMES, SERVICE AND MOST OF ALL THE LOW, LOW RATES mm mm& (C! . k. E : UULJ SOFA & CHAIR NOW 1 95 per month RENT-TO OWN Whirlpool Washer & Dryer NOW 95 .1 r 'o SQ month RENT-TO-OWN FREE SHEETS, Pillowcases & Comforter icr as long as you rent your new waierbed J3 T ma RENT-TO-OWN Video Recorders now399 month RENT-TO-OWN CiNSTTE UWNGROOil' &&i&GM 19" COLOR TV ff-now RENT-TO-OWN per month Refrigerator NOW 3795 Cmi Pr month RENT-TO-OWN Microwave NOW 1 A ' month Actual pieces may not be exactly as shown. 3"Room Apartastif Facltoge NOW cik Enough To Fill Your Entire Home or Apart rrent. month 21 Races Total foc!:2! per CiMLII irlSKz CAUL i Sofa Fcr L'ir Dttalfs! 9.93 ee me NOW RENTING FOR LESS! Small, Medium, Large & Extra Large Rcctincr 0.95 per mo. End Tcbbs ZS0 per mo. Coff3Tbb2.50 per mo. Lsmos i co perms. S'cepcrs - 24.05 mo. 3 Rent By The Month or For The Whole Summer! Twin Beds 14.95 per mo. Full Beds 15.95 per mo. 4.95 per mo. Stereo 14.95 per mo. Ranne 2S.95 per mo. Dibits 7.95 per mo. 13" CotorP; 14.95 per mo. 25" Color TV 49.95 per me Atari 12.95 prmo Pert. Stereo 14.95 per ma Wsterbsd 23.95 Dressers 8.95 per mo. if' " :f' ' t si f f S J Hi: I r 6 1 1 ! 3 Off The TTA75 ? National and international nevva from the Reutcr News Report moderate rJrti BRUSSELS All mainstream parties except the Socialists took an overall beating in the European Parliamentary elections, as disen chanted electors stayed home or voted for new fringe groups at both end3 of the political spec trum. Many people in the 10 countries of the European Community .ignored the largely powerless Strasbourg parliament to express a protest vote on purely national issues. Across the Community, as a whole, the turnout after a dull campaign was 60 percent, failing to match even the mediocre 62 percent of the 1979 elec tion. Parliamentary sources said the low poll on Thursday and Sunday could hinder the European Parliament's quest for greater re sponsibility and stiffen the resistance of the Danish and British governments to granting it more power. Highlights of the election were the electoral breakthroughs by disparate parties of right and left the militantly anti-immigrant French National Front, and the radical ecologists of West Germany's Greens Party. Racial bias case settled WASHINGTON - The U.S. Air Force has agreed to a $3.75 million settlement in a long standing law suit charging it had discrimi nated against black workers at Robins Air Force Base, near Macon, Ga., the Pentagon announced Monday. Officials said this was the . largest settlement made by the Air Force in a race bias complaint. The Air Force agreed with the complainants in the class-action suit to divide the money among 2,600 blacks working at the base since 1972 and to promote retroac tively, with back pay, certain black employees. But the Pentagon said the settlement did not admit any discrimination by the Air Force. It said the U.S. District Court for the Middle Dis trict of Georgia must still formally approve of the settlement. The court will also divide the settlement among the complainants. The case was opened in 1973 when 15 black workers filed a complaint with the Air Force, alleging racial discrimination in promotions and other aspects of employment. Their com plaints were merged into the class-action suit that ultimately reached the U.S. District Court. Financial favor extended PARIS Paraguay, supported by the World Bank in Washington, is set to receive the first international loan incorporating a device to "cap" high world interest rates, banldng sour ces said Monday. Under the terms of the $15 million agricultural credit, Paraguay will auto matically get longer to repay if the floating annual interest rate rises above 12 percent in the last, five years. Some Latin American coun tries blame much of their inability to repay debts on the rise in U.S. interest rates, which govern the amount they must pay. The sources noted that Paraguay is consi dered a good credit risk compared with some countries in Latin America, the region most severely affected by the debt crisis. The loan is particularly favored as it supports cattle ranch ing, Paraguay's biggest export industry. Equine death investigated PARIS, Ky. Swale, America's top three-year-old thoroughbred, was buried in the Ken tucky bluegrass country Monday as veterinary experts sought to unravel the mystery of his death. The remains were shipped here over night from New York's Belmont Park, where the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes win ner collapsed and died yesterday after a morn ing workout. The death of Swale, who won nearly $1.6 million in 14 races and was consi dered remarkably sound, has baffled veteri narians and racing officials. It was initially though that the colt suffered a freak heart attack, but an autopsy at Belmont on Sunday failed to pinpoint the cause of death. Monday, specialized testing began on the colt's brain, liver and other organs at veteri nary facilities in New York and at a University of Pennsylvania institute outside Philadelphia. Officials said it would take at least two weeks for the test results. Philip G leaves, a Liverpsol born assistant to trainer Woody Stephens, said veterinarians had not ruled out foul play as a possibility, and that blood, urine and tissue samples would be tested for poisons. Poge 2 . Dcy Nehraskan Tuesday, Juno 19, 1984