Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 01, 1981, Section A, Page 8, Image 8

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    Welcome Back!
Have a good term.
Banana Split
Sale
Today, October 1
Buy one at the regular price
get the second one for a penny.
A
Dairy
Queen
►
13th & Hilyard
Federal job
applications
due Oct. 13
Students interested in taking
the PACE exam — which
provides the opportunity to
compete tor federal agency jobs
— should sign up now.
according to Sandy Heins,
education placement coordina
tor at the career planning and
placement service
Less than two weeks remain
in the application period, which
began Sept 14 and ends Oct
13 Application cards post
marked after Oct 13 will not be
accepted, according to a feder
al announcement
Jobs filled through the PACE
— Professional and Administra
tive Career Examination — are
trainee positions that lead to
higher-level professional, ad
ministrative and technical fobs,
the announcement says Salar
ies begin at $12,266 per year
Entry-level employees work
as personnel specialists, man
agement analysts, revenue of
ficers and social insurance
claims examiners among other
positions
To be eligible for employment
consideration, applicants must
meet the experience and/or
education requirements out
lined in a handout available at
career planning and placement
Applicants will be scheduled
to take the 416-hour written test
between Jan 1, 1982 and Feb
15. 1982, receiving results
about six weeks after taking the
test
Only United States citizens
may apply in this examination
Hines says he will offer a
workshop on government em
ployment Tuesday from 3:00 to
4 00 pm in EMU Rooms 110
and 111 The workshop will give
an overview of opportunities in
federal state and local govern
ment and will offer tips on how
to search for government em
ployment, he says
PACE exam application cards
and further information are
available at career planning and
placement, Room 246 Susan
Campbell Hall or call 686-3235
Sterilization on
agenda tonight
Should concern over world
hunger mandate human ster
ilization programs tor the sur
vival of the fittest"?
Sharon Claeyssens. a univer
sity doctoral student in
sociology, will answer no"
tonight at the monthly Peace
and Justice Forum, sponsored
by Clergy and Laity Concerned
(CALC)
Claeyssens says she will cri
tique population control pro
grams that claim
overpopulation automatically
leads to poverty
In the United States there
have been several cases of
coerced sterilization she says
For example, during the 1960s
black women in the south were
forced to travel to another state
to have their babies if fhey
wanted to avoid being sterilized
A $1.50 soup dinner will be
held before the meeting, which
is scheduled for 7 p m at First
Congregational Church on 24th
Avenue at Harris Street For
more information call CALC at
485-1755