TKS LIST 1V7SMM
Mothers Day Specials For Two
Whole “Stuffed Baked Chicken”
with Tossed Green Salad or Cup of Soup
Choice of Potato ft Garlic Bread
"Split of Champagne"
$10.50
or
“Steamer clams for two”
With Drawn butter A Lemon
Tossed Green Salad or Cup of Soup
Choice of Potato & Garlic Bread
Complementary Split of Champagne
$12.50
Dinner Served from Noon - 9 PM • May 9.
Reservations being accepted.
535 Main Springfield • 747-4307
uf\
caught ya!
Come into our world of
International Cuisine and Entertainment...
INTERNATIONAL
CULTURAL
FESTIVAL
Multi-national food,
dances, songs and slide show
May 9 • EMU Ballroom
6 p.m. • $4.00
Tickets available at
EMU Main Desk. FSO office
or at the door
I.M. AVAILABLE
100 College Street
State University. OR 90000
(503) 111-2222
OBJECTIVE Position as a planner in public or private sector, or in a communications field
related to planning.
EDUCATION BA (Independent Studies Program. Honors College), University of Oregon 1980
field: Dynamics and Management of Urban Growth
Secondary emphases: Rhetoric and Communications: Political Science; and
Economics. Thesis: “Design With Nature: A proposal for Planning in Oregon'
GPA: 3.7
EXPERIENCE
Reiated
Research Assistant. Researched county records: conducted interviews with
mobile home owners to gain information for uniform appraisal of mobile
homes. Computer Appraisal Institute. 1980
Planner Researched local land use policies. Organized political support for a
subdivision proposal Developed a means to use government geographic data to
locate and developable land Assembled a design team for a Planned Unit
Development proposal Premo-Mod Corp.. 1979
Congressional Intern Acted as federal agency liaison for the constituents of
Oregon Fourth District Congressman Jim Weaver. Researched Economic
Development bills and prepared written testimony for Rep Weaver 1979
Land Use Researcher Researched a local land use issue and co-authored a
45-page publication which sold 200 copies and was used as required reading in
two U. of O. classes U. of O. Survival Center, 1977
Other Gymnastics Coach. Part and full time for the Multnomah Athletic Club and
Tualitan Hills Park and Recreation District (THPRD), 1972 - 1976 Coordinated
THPRD's 1976 summer program, which involved six instructors and several
hundred participants.
PERSONALS Born in Portland. Oregon. Enjoy photography, painting, outdoor sports,
literature and gardening.
REFERENCES Available on request.
Available August 1, 1980. After June 15, reach me at 222 Redtree Rd„ Portland, OR 97225
(503) 644-4786.
Date April, 1980.
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emerald
inter/national
From Associated Prvti ropovts
Study links kids’
aggression and TV
WASHINGTON
Television is "a violent form of
entertainment" that clearly leads
to aggressive behavior by
children and teen-agers, a new
government study concluded
Wednesday
The National Institute of Mental
Health said the evidence has
mounted since a 1972 Surgeon
General's report first implicated
television as a cause of violence
by children
"The evidence accumulated in
the 1970s seems overwhelming
that televised violence and
aggression are positively related
in children, " the institute said
Despite periodic outcries from
members of Congress and
citizens' groups, the study found
no decrease in the level of viole
nce on television
"The percentage of programs
containing violence has remained
about the same since 1967,
although the number of violent
acts per program has increased,"
it said.
The 94-page report, "Televi
sion and Behavior: Ten Years of
Scientific Progress and Implica
tions for the Eighties.'' was based
on a two-year review of hundreds
of research studies
The report, which focused on
television entertainment, made no
recommendations, but Dr.
Herbert Pardes, director of the
institute, said its findings have
implications for parents, policy
makers and the television in
dustry
CBS said it would not respond
to the report; NBC and ABC had
no immediate comment
Skyjack note found
in Hinckley’s room
WASHINGTON
An airliner hijacking note say
ing "I have a bomb with me a
companion is with me with a
firearm" was found in John Hin
ckley's hotel room on the day he
shot Pres Reagan 13 months
ago, his jury was told Wednesday
Also in the room was a picture
postcard addressed to actress
Jodie Foster in which Hinckley
said "one day you and I will
occupy the White House
please do your best to remain a
virgin "
And there were 38 pages of
Hinckley's writings, mostly
poems, one of which began "Cri
ticize you may this act of mine, I
trust you'll appreciate the roman
tic reasons One final stand and
the poet shall die, a moment to
pour out my feelings We all abhor
the end result "
There was no testimony to in
dicate what, if anything. Hinckley
planned to do with the hijack note
or when it was written
It was found on a Band-Aid box
in Hinckley ’s hotel room on March
30, 1981, after he wounded the
president and three other men
"This plane has been hi
jacked,” it said. "I have a bomb
with me plus flammable liquids
and a knife. A companion is with
me with a firearm Act naturally
and lead the way to the cabin
Stay calm "
Hurt’s testimony came as the
government prepared to rest its
case in U S District Court against
Hinckley for shooting the
president, Press Secretary James
Brady and two law enforcement
officers
Steelworkers union
opens bread line
HOMESTEAD, Pa.
Laid-ofl steelworkers lined up
for free bread, milk and canned
goods Wednesday as their union
opened a food bank that was
financed through a benefit rock
concert, raffles and donations at
mill gates
United Steelworkers pen
sioners volunteered their time to
hand out grocery bags filled with
canned meat, tuna fish, soup,
beans and other canned goods
for those whose jobless benefits
are nearly exhausted
■'We're talking about feeding
people who have nowhere else to
go for help, said Mike Stout, a
grievance officer tor the union
We want to make sure people
at least can get by and at least
have something to eat to ride
through this crisis
Nearly a third of the 7,000
workers at U S Steel Corp s
Homestead Works have lost their
jobs
About two dozen men and
women, some accompanied by
their children, waited in the
hallway of a vacated school
building in this blue-collar town
east of Pittsburgh for the 10 a m
opening of the food bank
"We're in a soup line," said Jim
Davis of Homestead, who was laid
off after having worked for 26 Vi
years
"I lose all my manhood to do
this," said the 50-year-old Davis,
hefting two bags of groceries for
his family "But what can I do?
You have to eat It's very bad, and
it's not getting any better,"
Union officials expected to
hand out 250 to 300 bags of
groceries on opening day Dis
tribution will continue once a
week until food supplies are gone
The union is planning more
concerts and other events to keep
the food bank going
Hair Care
Specials
Perms:
reg. $35.00 $28°°
(including haircut)
Haircut: *goo
reg. $12.00
Call Carol
at the
Turning Point
343*4813
2660 Oak
►—"bring coupons