Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1982)
| Prepare For April 24,1982 MCAT Call Days Evenings & Weekends 485-5699 Educational Center, CUSSES BEGIN: FEBRUARY 27. 1982 _£mu Prepares you for an English explosion witl XTC ns:.; l V 1 with special Jools Holland & his Millionaires FRIDAY, APRIL 9 8 PM, EMU BALLROOM Tickets: 6.50— 8.00 Availabte at the EMU Main Desk Everybody's Records. Eugene & Corvallis Diana's & Earth River Records If you’re tired of. . shopping for food planning menus washing dishes cleaning the bathroom lonely nights with no friends % DO WE HAVE A DEAL FOR YOU! Lots of spaces for women — limited space for men The U of O Residence Halls offer you the best buy in town . . . hallwavs and rooms fully carpeted . sheets and pillow cases laundered for you once a week 20 meals a week (3 meals a day and breakfast and noon dinner on Sundays) with all you can eat, salad bars, vegetarian choices, pleasant atmosphere . . . laundry facilities . . . color cable TV' And all this for you: Spring Term* $489.00 (double) $634.00 (single) That’s LESS THAN $200 a month for full room and board for the rest of the school year in a double room. You can’t beat those prices. And consider the fringe benefits. . . •ready made friends to share the fun of ski trips to the mountains, barbecues at the beach, study breaks around the fireplace, intramural teams in many sports. •computer terminals in each complex for resident s use •writing labs and study seminars for specials programming, look into our Environmental hall, our Academic Pursuit hall or our International Studies hall. Each has something unique. •slightly higher prices at the University Inn where private baths and phones are a part of the regular service. For more information and an application come to the Housing Office: Walton hall, 15th and Agate (across from Hayward Field) Qr ^ 68 5.4277 Page 4 emerald inter/national From Associated Prass rsports Israeli troops battle rioters TEL AVIV, Israel Israeli troops used tear gas to break up a Palestinian demon stration in Nablus and an Israeli settler fired his pistol to escape a road ambush in the occupied West Bank Monday, the military command reported It was the 11th straight day of clashes in a wave of troubles in the occupied Arab territories in which five Arabs have been killed by Israeli gunfire Prime Minister Menachem Begin s government, which said Sunday it would not tolerate violence in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, meanwhile was bracing for trouble among Is rael's Arab citizens on Tuesday, the sixth anniversary of clashes that killed six Israeli Arabs The military command said five West Bank villages and refugee camps were under total curfew, including the village of Khadr, where an Israeli settler was ambushed by a hail of stones and burning tires were rolled at his car at an improvised road barricade The Israeli, who is the treas urer at the nearby settlement Gush Etzion, drew his pistol and fired to drive off the rioters, the command said An anti-Israel demonstration at Al-Najah University in Nablus turned violent during the after noon, and troops used tear gas to disperse the crowd, the army said Reliable witnesses reported the troops fired bullets at the legs of the crowd in Nablus, but the army said only tear gas was used Explosion rips express train LIMOGES, France A bomb exploded aboard an express train racing through the hilly countryside near Limoges Monday night, gutting one car and killing at least five passengers. Officials speculat ed that it was either a terrorist attack or an accidental explo sion of a terrorist bomb Twelve people were injured, two of them seriously French television said police believed explosives being transported by terrorists may have blown up accidentally The broadcast said authorities were questioning a young woman passenger An official at the Limoges prefecture (regional authority) described the explosion as a terrorist attack " There was no immediate claim of responsibility The blast hit the second car of the 15-car train about 15 miles northeast of the city of Limoges on a regular Paris-Toulouse run A journalist, Simone Jorand, said the train was traveling at 85-100 mph and the engineer was unable to stop it for more than a mile after the explosion She said the train did not de rail, but stopped in a deep cut ting, and the 200 rescuers had to walk more than half a mile along the tracks to reach the wreckage Land use advocates sue five counties SALEM Land use planning advocates Monday asked a court to order the Oregon Land Conservation and Development Commission to crack down on five counties for allegedly ignoring state law A group known as 1,000 Friends of Oregon asked for an order directing the agency to require the counties to com plete their comprehensive land use plans and adopt regulations which are in compliance with state planning goals The action, filed in Marion County Circuit Court, claims that Baker, Columbia, Coos, Malheur and Umatilla counties either lack comprehensive land use plans as required by law or have adopted plans which are not in compliance with state planning goals If immediate adoption of land use regulations is not granted, the suit asks that the LCDC be directed to set a deadline which the counties would have to meet The lawsuit contends that the counties have not taken care to preserve agricultural land, one of the goals adopted by the state which should be reflected in local plans According to the suit, the counties have all received plan ning money and additional time in order to draft the necessary plans and regulations « Help celebrate Henry Weinhard’s birthday. Tomorrow at the Pad! 3355 E. Amazon Dr., Eugene 342-3575 Tuesday, March 30,1982