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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1982)
TIN 0 'S |L SPAGHETTI 342-8111 TINO’S • Full dinner menu • 23 varieties of Pizzas • Whole wheat and white crust • Pizzas to go -cooked and uncooked 15th and Willamette New Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:00-M id night Frl. 11:00-1:00 am Sat. 5:00-1 00 am. Sun. 5:00-11:00 p.m. emerald inter/national From British invasion appears imminent FALKLAND ISLANDS Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said Monday that Bri tain will give U N. talks one more chance to settle the Falkland Islands conflict, but she report edly warned Argentina it has 48 hours to make peace. "We have gone as far as we can," she told Independent Radio News, clearly exasperat ed at what she called Argentine intransigence. "They are the invader They are the aggres sor We are the aggrieved It is up to them " Asked how long she would wait before abandoning efforts by U N Secretary General Pe rez de Cuellar, Thatcher said: "My guess is that we shall know this week whether we are going to get a peaceful settlement or not" Earlier, Britain's domestic news agency Press Association quoted military sources as say ing Thatcher told U N Ambas sador Anthony Parsons to warn Argentine negotiators they must settle in 48 hours. Otherwise she would order troops aboard the Royal Navy war fleet to storm the South Atlantic is lands In Buenos Aires, the military junta denounced Britain's policy of bombing Argentine targets in the South Atlantic — including what it called un armed cargo ships — while at the same time claiming to seek peace. No new fighting was reported Monday, but war correspon dents aboard the British fleet of 82-plus ships said forces went on a two-hour alert when the carrier Hermes spotted six Ar gentine jets on radar The jets disappeared without incident, they said The lull followed Britain's Sunday raids when warplanes bombed the airfield at Stanley, the Falklands capital, and strafed two Argentine supply ships in the British-declared war zone One vessel was later abandoned Mutineers detained at Houston docks HOUSTON Five Panamanian freighter crewmmen suspected of killing their first officer and plotting to kill seven other crew members were detained aboard the ves sel after it docked today in Houston, officials said Immigration and Naturaliza tion Service supervisor Ray Larson said the only U S action 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 1960 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 Related 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. Catch their eye first. First impressions are very important Your resume says who you are before the interviewers even see you. If your resume can catch their eye and hold their attention just a little longer than the others, if it stands out on a crowded desk, then you've got your foot in the door so you can speak for yourself A resume professionally produced by the Oregon Daily Emerald Jobwork Department gives you the visual edge you'll need to make a favorable first impression and to stand up to the competition. Browse through our samples We offer you an attractive variety of formats and typestyles to choose from Just bring in a typewritten version of your resume, select a format and leave the rest up to us We offer a 10% discount to UO students with a current ID and fee card Oregon Daily Emerald Jobwork Department 300 EMU Monday-Friday 8 am-5 pm or by appointment 686-5511 in the matter would be to make sure the five crewmen were not permitted off the ship while it is in U S. waters. The freighter Evergreen ar rived from New Orleans at the Houston city docks after the Coast Guard and FBI on Satur day night responded to a report of a mutiny aboard. FBI spokesman Russ Ander son said a federal special weapons and tactics team and a group of Coast Guardsmen boarded the Evergreen on Sat urday as it was anchored at the mouth of the Mississippi River The FBI agents, he said, found that the alleged mutineers were already under ship arrest by the captain. The five men were handcuffed and locked in a cabin, he said The FBI spokesman said the ship's first officer, Dajit Suberoi, 42, of Jullundur, India, was killed Saturday morning in in ternational waters, 110 miles south-southeast of Port Eads, La, and his body apparently tossed overboard Rep claims Nazis smuggled in to U.S. WASHINGTON Rep Barney Frank, D-Mass has called tor a congressional investigation into reports that State Department officials secretly smuggled hundreds of Nazi war criminals into the Unit ed States in exchange for Soviet intelligence information. Frank, a member of the House subcommittee on investiga tions, called the reported Nazi recruitment operation “the most appalling mixture of moral in sensitivity and incompetence I have seen ' Frank said Sunday that he was informed of the purported clandestine program by John Loftus, a former prosecutor with the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigation, the unit responsible for ferreting out war criminals Loftus. appearing on the CBS-TV program “60 Minutes" Sunday, charged the smuggling program was run by the State Department's Office of Policy Coordination More than 300 Nazi war criminals still live in the United States and some of them work for the government, Loftus said The FBI, the Army and the State Department were all in volved in enlisting Nazi help to spy on the Soviets in exchange for American citizenship and jobs, Loftus said “They knew that the entire Nazi government of Byelorus sia, the president, the vice pre sidents, cabinet ministers, governors and mayors, police chiefs were all living in Amer ica,” Loftus said WILDERNESS QUARTER ■ackcountry Field Studies August 2 24 5 units • High Sierra Natural History • The Alpine Made mess • Nature Writing August 30 - November 4. 15 units • Toseimte Wilderness • John Muir Wilderness • Wddemess Journal • Backcountry Hawaii |9/l7-ll/22) Wddemess Studies Carnage House UNIVERSITY OF CAL EXTENSION Santa Cnu. CA 95084 (408| 429-2761