Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 18, 1981, Page 4, Image 4

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    CIliCAee 9TYLK MEiA
GET STUFFED!
I wanna stuff you an' yer
favorite wid a small
Southsider pizza anna
pitcher a soft
drink er beer fer
i I//I I ix
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BROADWAY
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Cultural Forum and Laserium present
THE DOS EQUIS LASER XXPERIENCE
Featuring the music of:
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EMU Ballroom
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The Tubes
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The Police
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ub
Journey
through the
cosmos...
and never
inter/national news
From «—orl»W(1 Prill rapofts
Troops continue
desert maneuvers
CAIRO WEST AIR BASE. Egypt
U S and Egyptian troops fired
ground-to-air missiles in
cluding Soviet SAM-7s at
orange-colored drones and
miniature versions of Soviet
MiG-23 fighter planes during
maneuvers T uesday
On the second day of training
between American and Egyp
tian forces participating in the
Bright Star '82 exercises U S
troops in desert fatigues
showed off their anti-aircraft
skills
Meanwhile in Addis Ababa
Ethiopia the pro-Soviet
governments of Ethiopia Libya
and South Yemen condemned
the United States for arro
gance of power" in staging the
exercises which they contend
are a threat to peace in the
Mideast and the Horn of Africa
The exercises on the training
field of this air base some 18
miles west of Cairo began
Saturday
The Americans — members of
the 82nd Airborne Division and
the 24th Mechanized Infantry
Division — had what Lt Gen
Robert Kingston said was a
good shoot' at the moving
targets Kingston is head of
America s Rapid Deployment
Force
It's been a very valuable
experience said Lt Col Darrel
McFerron of the 18th Airborne
Corps “It s been an opportunity
to see the Egyptian air defense
system, which is basically
Soviet-produced, the type of
system we could encounter" in
combat
With 4,000 U S troops in
volved in Bright Star ’82. it is the
largest test of America s Rapid
Deployment Force, the unit
created to protect U S interests
in the Middle East should the
need arise
Recession looms,
says government
WASHINGTON
The slight recession Pres
Reagan forecast a month ago
has become an “average
downturn that will r-uin the
administration s prediction for
strong economic growth in
1982. a chief administration
economist said Tuesdav
“The depth of this recession
will be about average rank
for the post-war period Murray
Weidenbaum. chairman of the
president s Council on Econ
omic Advisers said in describing
the eighth recession in the
economy since World War II
In an interview with a group of
reporters. Weidenbaum also
reaffirmed the possibility that
unemployment at 8 percent of
the labor force in October,
could return to a post-war peak
of 9 percent by next March
At the same time he said
inflation, running at a 14 8 per
cent annual rate for consumer
prices in September, should
unwind to a rate of 7 percent to
8 percent for 1982 — the lowest
level since 1977
All in all. I see this as the
rocky road the economy travels
on the path to stronger growth
and less inflation, he said
The kind of economic adjust
ment we re going through is
accompanied by rising unem
ployment
Solidarity hopes
for conciliation
WARSAW, Poland
Solidarity and the Communist
government opened talks
Tuesday on the Polish crisis and
both sides expressed hope that
conciliation will end the turmoil
that has swept the nation for
more than a year
Trade Union Minister
Stamslaw Ciosek, the chief
government representative
said in convening the discus
sions This is a time of unrest in
Poland but it is also a time of
hope
Solidarity s national spokes
man Marek Brunne. said
if.
TEACHING JOBS OPEN
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leads the world in the application of
nuclear power for propulsion, with over 100
nuclear powered ships, more on the way!
Instructors in math, physics, chemistry,
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You need: BS/MS degree.
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Call collect - Trevis Luz (503) 221-3041
"We are not preparing our
selves for an all-out bayonet
charge on the government,
which means we are not in the
grip of do-or-die sentiments We
are not prepared to impose our
dictates on the government,
either "
The government is asking
Solidarity to join a front of
national accord" and accept a
consultative role in dealing with
the country s acute social and
economic problems
Solidarity however, wants a
partnership in a social-econ
omic council." along with in
creased access to TV and radio
time, an independent judiciary
and free local elections
Senate committee
okays money bill
WASHINGTON
The Republican-controlled
Senate Appropriations Commit
tee ignoring Pres Reagan s
written request for a five percent
across-the-board spending cut
Tuesday approved a massive
money bill to keep the govern
ment in business after midnight
Friday
Both Democrats and Repub
licans in Congress said they
expected Reagan to veto the bill
when it reaches his desk
probably Friday
That in turn, could keep
Congress in session through
the weekend as it struggles to
draft a revised measure that
meets the president s condi
tions
The Senate apropriations
panel took its action after rejec
ting , on an 18-8 vote a proposal
to cut spending by up to two
percent across the board
Reagan opposes
European missiles
WASHINGTON
Pres Reagan is ready to
propose to the Soviet Union that w
both superpowers virtually
eliminate nuclear missiles from
the European theater State
Department officials said
T uesday
The president, it was said will
use a foreign policy speech
today at the National Press Club
to embrace the so-called zero
option approach as the goal
for Soviet-American negotia
tions on restraining nuclear for
ces in Europe
The option consists of an ex
pected U S offer not to un
dertake the planned de
ployment of new U S medium
range missiles in Europe if the
Soviet Union agrees to disas
semble its own missiles
^-"-.— ^Il