daily nebraskan Wednesday, may 3, 1978 page 10 r -paid advertisement- Nixon plans for a publishing party Former oresident Richard Nixon, who until recently. kept himself secluded in California, is planning a May 21 publishing party at his San Clemen te estate. The guests will include the editor of Nixon's memoirs, Robert Mar- associated press datelines paid advertisement L-- -J kel of Grosset & Dunlap; publisher Harold Roth, and two executives of Warner Books. Nixon also has invited for mer U.S. prisoners of war to his home May 27 during the commemoration in nearby Los Angeles of their release from North Vietnam five years ago. Nazi exhibit to be rescheduled Lawrence, Kansas -An exhibit of Nazi memorabilia, has tily closed four hours before it was to open, can be re scheduled, the University of Kansas has announced. The exhibit was scheduled April 19, during the week of Hit ler's birthday, the Jewish Passover and shortly after the four-part television series "Holocaust" was broadcast. The university said the coincidental timing of the event was unintentional. to 26 cents in 1,400-tablet lots. Fluorescent light bulbs cost 99 cents for a lot of 576 but $1.37 each from the same supplier to a hospital that bought nearly 1,000, Talmadge said. Coffee chairman jailed Mexico City - Fausto Cantu Pena, former chairman of the Mexican Coffee Institute, and five other men were be hind bars Tuesday awaiting trial on charges of smuggling eight million pounds of coffee into the United States and evading $10 million in taxes. Pena and former MCI mar keting officials Daniel Morales Alanis and Hilario Hernan dex Galindo were indicted Monday along with private ex porters on 14 counts of smuggling, tax evasion and accept ing bribes. All six pleaded innocent. No trial date was announced. Idi has happy feet Kitgum, Uganda - President Idi Amin, sporting a blue safari suit and ascot, delighted a crowd of local tribesmen by taking up a spear and shield and joining traditional dances to the beat of drums. At one point during the May Day celebration, Amin also jumped on a bicycle pulling a sickbed on wheels and pedaled around a grassy field. Hospital money waste studied Anti-theft devices required J WochitintrMi It iruM h harrier tr Chicago - Sloppy hospital buying practices annually waste nearly $664 million in tax money, congressional in vestigators say. Describing the situation as "almost unbelievable," Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., told a news conference Monday that a General Accounting Office study of purchasing at 14 Seattle hospitals found that the hospitals paid widely ranging prices for identical goods. The G AO found the hos pitals were charged more than twice as much for the same item when they bought in large quantities. A medical supply company sold morphine tablets for 11 cents each in quantities of 700 and increased the price Washington - It would be harder to steal a car under a new rule proposed Tuesday by the Transpor tation Department. The rule would require vehicles to have such burglar-proof devices as special ignition wires to prevent a car from being started without a key, hood latches that can be released only from inside the car and rounded door-lock mechanisms that prevent a door from being opened by poking a coat hanger through a window crack. The department's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration asked for public comments on the pro posal by July 31 . Red Cross fl is counting p on you. A Pubic Service This Newsoaper WW I Trie Advertising Council fj j .getting , ahead MAU 245 North 13th Street Store Hours: Mon.-Sat 10-6 Thurs. 10-9 47th Anniversary Summer's here and it's time to shift gears into something cool and casual! Our sporty cotton naturals will keep you looking good and having tun' SAVE ON TOPS Regularly St 0.00 SAVE ON SHORTS Regularly $10.00 ,JEA"S 12.99 PLAID SHIRTS ftft ;..... V 0.99 !0P? 7.99 CALCUTTA PANTS ( 3 gg SUNDBE?SES 15.99 Of X W J 1 Pre-Season Special! LEATHER JACKETS $69 Margy Meister recently was elected new director of the Nebraska University Public Interest Research Group. Meister is a senior broadcast journalism major from Omaha. Lee Dillard was elected assistant direc tor. Dillard is a junior university studies major from Papillion . A junior business major from Omaha, Marjie Prucka, was elected treasurer and freshman political science and sociology major from Lincoln, Bonnie Lutz, was elected secretary. A UNL engineer, known as a pioneer in the development of solar heating systems, has been granted $110,000 from the U.S. Depart men of Energy. Dick Bourne, associate professor of con struction management, will study the use of membrane-lined containers in storage of hot water produced by solar collectors. Bourne said he believes the value of solar heating systems already has been pro ven. He added that the costs must be re duced to compete with conventional heat ing systems. Gary L. Smith, associate professor of life sciences has been awarded $46,700 to continue research of growth in normal and neoplastic cells. The National Cancer Institute has awarded the money to UNL for Smith, who has been researching the subject for four years. Smith has been a UNL faculty member since 1974. A CAREER IN LAW without law school After just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you'll have a career in law or business without graduate school. You'll be work ing closely with attorneys and business people performing many of the duties traditionally handled by lawyers. 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