Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 29, 1983, Page 12, Image 11

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    War
Continued from Page 6
seriously affect the Soviet Union
because it would take at least two
months before other nations
would be able to fill in the void
left by the United States.
"They (the Soviets) desperately
need American grain. They
desperately need American and
Japanese high technology,"
Fiszman says.
Forcing Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko to land 75 miles
from Kennedy Airport or boycot
ting Russian vodka sales in the
United States is not enough, they
say.
"Because of the act's
seriousness, the (U.S.) govern
ment should take serious actions.
It would be proper for the U.S.
and the world to shut its ports to
Soviet commerce until proper
answers are given as to what hap
pened," Kimball says.
And "until the world gets a
sense there will be cooperation
and a responsible investigation,
the Soviet Union should be barred
from participating in civilian
peace-time commerce,” Kimball
says.
Yet there is a limit to what
Reagan can do "without courting
nuclear disaster," Fiszman says.
"You cannot declare war. We are
paralyzed by sitting on nuclear
weapons."
Although the Soviet image
abroad is taking a beating now, in
six months the situation will be
forgotten, Fiszman says. "They
have committed worse atrocities
in the past and it was forgotten.
What ever they do, people have
short memories. And all you need
is for the Americans to commit a
blunder, as they are likely to do in
Central America or the Middle
East, and the attention will be swit
ched from Andropov to Reagan."
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Sessions to help
students who have
eating problems
If you are one of many college
students who is obsessed about
food, diets and weight and if you
go on uncontrollable eating
binges and/or purges, there is
group help for you at the Universi
ty Student Counseling Center.
The group will be led by Susan
Moseley and Jill Wolf, graduate
students in Counseling
Psychology who have experience
helping women with eating
disorders. The group will meet
Tuesdays from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
and will begin on Oct. 4.
Call the Student Counseling
Center at 686-3227 to reserve a
place as space is limited. Addi
tional groups may be added if de
mand is high so call even if this
time is inconvenient.
Several reasons
create lack of
time schedules
The lack of time schedules for
fall registration this year is at
tributed to several causes, accor
ding to Jim Buch, director of
admissions.
Buch said the problem was pro
bably caused by a partially-filled
order through the printing com
pany. Other possibilities cited by
Buch were that some of the orders
are still on the trucks or that they
were lost in transit, that the
number of returning students ex
ceeded their expectations, or that
students picked up two or three
of the schedules and threw away
the extras.
"We ordered what we thought
was enough, and it should have
been an adequate amount," he
says.
He said though the Registrar's
office has been busy this week
with registering students, the pro
blem will be dealt with before
winter registration occurs. He felt
that "it caused some uncomfor
table moments (for students) and
we don't like to be caught short.
You can be sure it won't happen
again."
Correction
There will be an organiza
tional meeting at 3:30 p.m.
today in Suite 4 of the EMU
for Students Opposing
Registration and the Draft,
not Monday as was
reported in Tuesday's arti
cle. Also, the ASUO-Lane
Community College anti
Solomon rally is scheduled
for Oct. 14, not Oct. 15.
Hatfield plans
to announce
if he will run
PORTLAND (AP) — Sen. Mark
Hatfield will announce Oct. 28 in
Silverton whether he will run for a
fourth term in the U.S. Senate, ac
cording to a staffer in his Portland
office.
She gave no indication if
Oregon's senior senator has
decided to run or retire.
"We really don't know," the
staffer said, asking not to be iden
tified by name.
Hatfield aide Jerry Frank said the
senator's announcement will be
as much a surprise to his staff as it
will be to the public.
The Oct. 28 announcement will
be made at Emanuel Lutheran
Church in Silverton at 6:30 p.m.,
Frank said. Seating in the church
is limited, so tickets will be need
ed for admission, he added.
Hatfield, 61, was first elected to
the U.S. Senate in 1966 after serv
ing as a governor, secretary of
state, senator and representative
in Oregon.