Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 16, 1982, Page 6, Image 6

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    IT HAPPENS HERE
Every Friday is
HAT DAY
Wear a Hat,
*1
00
OFF
ANY
ANY HAT.and get dinner
Late Great SPAGHETTI FEED
Every Friday & Saturday Night
After 8 P.M. !
$495
All you can eat plus Vi liter ot wme or
small pitcher of Beer or coke
Ask about your FREE Birthday Dinner'
OPEN EVERY DAY 5PM
10%
DISCOUNT
To U. of O. Students, Faculty and
Staff on Service and Repairs
With current full-time student or staff University ID card
Service Department open Mon.-Fri.: 7:30-5:30, Sot.: 8:00-5:00
1570 South A, Springfield 746-8241
/IEGRI/T
Prices:
Assoc members $2 00
_ Students Sun-Thurs $2 SO
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Thursday and Friday
April 15 and 16
OREGON PREMIERE!!
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April 16-29
Nightly 7 & 9:30
Sat-Sun Mat. 3:30 p.m.
A new Wm by Rainer Werner Fassbinder
starring Gencario Gtanmni & Hanna Schygutta
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clips
i
Weaver proposes
freeze initiative
A proposed state initiative
that calls tor a freeze on nuclear
weapons will "send a strong
message" to Pres Ronald
Reagan that will make him think
twice about stockpiling more
nuclear arms, U S Rep. Jim
Weaver said Thursday.
"The nuclear freeze I have
put on the ballot is to save our
lives and to save our jobs,"
Weaver said in a press confer
ence at the Eugene Conference
Center
A campaign to get the issue
on the ballot will be announced
within two weeks. Weaver said
The initiative, also supported by
U S Rep Les AuCoin, D-Ore.,
already has a ballot title but will
require about 55,000 signatures
from registered Oregon voters
before it qualifies for a ballot
spot
A similar measure will be on
the June 5 ballot in California,
he said
It is crucial to bring the federal
budget into line by cutting the
"astronomical increase” in the
defense budget. Weaver said
Reagan has proposed a $221
billion defense budget, a
17-percent increase over the
current budget
The defense budget “will
destroy jobs in Oregon because
it drains money out of the eco
nomy,” Weaver said
For the price of two B-1
bombers, 10,000 jobs could be
created, and every house in
Oregon could be made energy
efficient, Weaver said
There is a strong bipartisan
support in Congress for cutting
the defense budget. Weaver
said, adding that the defense
budget should be cut twice —
once to help balance the budget
and a second time to pump
more money into the housing
industry and into energy ef
ficiency programs
Law school plans
Saturday forum
The chief justice of the
Oregon Supreme Court will
keynote a court reform sympo
sium at the University law
school Saturday
Arno Denecke’s keynote ad
dress at 9 a m begins the day
long discussion of Ballot Mea
sure 5 and related issues. The
measure — on the May 18
primary ballot — would author
ize the governor to appoint the
Oregon Supreme Court chief
justice
State Sen Ted Kulongoski,
D-Junction City; Hans Linde,
associate justice of the Oregon
Supreme Court; George Jo
seph, chief judge of the Oregon
Court of Appeals; and others
will speak on the measure, cir
cuit and district court con
solidation, and control of circuit
courts by the state government
Derrick Bell, dean of the law
school, will moderate
The symposium, sponsored
by the Student Bar Association,
is free For more information,
call John Karpinski or Jim Ed
munson at 689-6456
Activist to speak
on prison rights
The founder of a prisoners'
rights group in Burnaby, British
Columbia, speaks on "Instead
of Prisons” tonight in downtown
Eugene
Claire Culhane. author of
Barred From Prison, begins her
presentation at 8 p.m. in Harris
Hall at the Lane County Courth
ouse, 123 E Eighth Ave
Culhane, an activist who op
posed Canada's involvement in
Vietnam, turned her attention
after the war to Canada's pri
sons
Barred From Prison is a per
sonal account of prison reform
at the Oakalla and British
Columbia penitentiaries A Can
adian reviewer wrote, "Claire
Culhane is a brave Canadian It
will take a brave Canadian ci
tizenry to march to the drum she
is banging
Culhane is brought to Eugene
by Sponsors, Inc., and People
for Prison Alternatives. For
more information, call Vicky
Plaisted at 343-5419
Forest Service
needs volunteers
The United State Forest Ser
vice is looking for volunteers
this summer to help maintain
and improve the forests in
Oregon and Washington.
In an effort to cut costs with
out slashing service, the forest
service is offering a wide range
of jobs to willing volunteers,
says Jeff Sirmon of the forest
service
In eastern Oregon and Wa
shington, the service will em
phasize range management and
dispersed recration, and in the
western portions of those
states, it will concentrate on
timber management and
developed recreation areas.
Sirmon says
Work could include taking
wildlife censuses, monitoring
stream flow and water quality,
helping backcountry travelers,
maintaining trails and camping
areas, conducting natural his
tory walks, or office work, he
says
"There is a job to fit most
anyone "
Work hours are flexible, and
the only qualifications needed
are good health, and — for an
yone under 18 years old — par
ental consent. Sirmon says
Workers are not federal em
ployees, but they do receive
legal protection and insurance
for work-related injuries and, in
some cases, may be reimbursed
for travel, food and lodging ex
penses, he says
Volunteering is not limited to
individuals Organizations can
participate through the "Adopt
a Trail" program and maintain a
specific trail in a national forest
For more information, contact
the nearest Forest Service of
fice
Gourmet to talk
on world hunger
The former "Galloping Gour
met" trots into Eugene today to
speak on "Creative Relinquish
ment ”
Graham Kerr, the former
television host who directs a
Third World food project for
Youth With A Mission, speaks
from noon to 1:30 p.m in the
Koinonia Center at 1414 Kincaid
St
Kerr's talk is presented by the
Mars Hill Forum of the
Restoration Campus Ministry.
Mars Hill is designed to
"demonstrate the adequacy of
the Christian world view in areas
popularly thought to be outside
the scope of religion "
Next Friday at the forum, Gary
Snavely. pastor of the University
Street Church of Christ, wilt dis
cuss “The Restoration of the
New Testament Church."
A debate on "A Sociological
Perspective of Religion vs The
Revelatory View of Christianity"
will be held April 30 Speakers
include David Wagner, Univer
sity biology professor: Ben
Johnson, University sociology
professor; David Root, profes
sor of New Testament at North
west Christian College: and
Jack Crabtree of the McKenzie
Study Center
For more information, call
Dick Beswick at 484-1707
The Cafeteria-Grill
Monday-Friday
Opens for Breakfast 7 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Opens for Lunch 1030 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
New Item:
Waffle
with hot apple topping
.-. '