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Includes: Egg Flowers, Velvet soup Appetizers: Fried Wonton Fried Shrimps Mar Far Chicken Entree Chicken Almond Sub Gum Chow Mein Pineapple Sweet & Sour Pork Barbecue Pork Fried Rice Tea or Coffee 4 Fortune Cookies Now Serving Beer, Wine Try our Special Lunch M-F SAVE *2.00 *3V person Reg. *6.00 per person & Cocktails $*|95 (open 7 days a week from 11:30 to 10.00 p.m.) Sy's Pizza Free Campus Delivery Special Call Sy's for delicious New York Style Pizza 686-9598 50< Off any Small or Medium U ^ 1 any Large Your Choice of Regular or Sicilian (thick) Crust Delivery Hours: 5:30-Midnight Offer good with coupon only Good Monday Oct 10. through Sunday Oct 16 Don’t Forget to Ask for Your Two Free Drinks With Every Delivery Sy's Pizza 1211 Alder On Campus 686-9598 I I inter,1 national From AhocuIkI Prwi reports Marines hit by gunfire BEIRUT — Two U.S. Marines were wounded and a U.S. helicopter was hit by small arms fire Sunday at the Marine encamp ment near Beirut International Airport. Some of the American units were put on alert as sporadic ex changes of fire between Shiite Moslem militiamen and the Lebanese army continued in near by neighborhoods despite the cease-fire in Lebanon's civil war. U.S. Middle East envoy Robert C. McFarlane met in Damascus with Syria's foreign minister in an effort to strengthen the cease-fire. Maj. Robert Jordan, a Marine spokesman, said one soldier was hit in the heel Saturday night by a stray round near the main en trance to the Marines' airport encampment. The other American was shot in the shoulder Sunday morning at the Marine position near the Lebanese Scientific University east of the airport, he said. The two Marines, who were not immediately identified, were treated at the Marine base and released. Jordan described the shooting as a possible effort to "goad the Marines into action." He said the Marines did not shoot back in either incident. Koreans die in explosion RANGOON, Burma — A terrorist bomb apparently meant for South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan ripped through a memorial site Sunday, killing four of his Cabinet ministers, the ambassador to Bur ma and several top aides. The governments of Burma and South Korea said 16 South Koreans and three Burmese jour nalists were killed by the explo sion at the Martyr's Mausoleum in Rangoon minutes before Chun ar F'<'i 1 * r * .j < V *' rived for the ceremony. They said at least 48 people were wounded, including two Burmese Cabinet ministers and 15 high-ranking South Koreans. South Korean officials accused North Korea of engineering the explosion, which devastated the senior leadership of Chun's government. It came on the first day of a scheduled 18-day presidential goodwill tour. Burmese and South Korean of ficials said Chun and his wife im mediately flew back to Seoul, canceling the remainder of the trip. In Seoul, police sealed off the airport before the arrival and stop ped reporters from entering. Bust yields pot harvest CHEHAUS, Wash. — Charges were expected Monday against two men arrested after Lewis County sheriff's officers seized some $4 million worth of mari juana in raids on two barns near Mossyrock and Onalaska. The names of the 29-year-old Seattle man and the 39-year-old Onalaska man being held in the Lewis County jail were not being released while authorities sought to obtain additional records in the case, Lewis County Undersheriff Randy Hamilton said Sunday. Hamilton said the two would be charged with cultivation and manufacturing of marijuana, a violation of the uniform substances act. A total of 885 marijuana plants, 5'/2 to 6 feet high and bushy, and 260 pounds of packaged and dry ing pot were seized in the Mossyrock raid Friday and the Onalaska bust Saturday, he said. Hamilton estimated about $3 million worth of marijuana was in live plants with the remainder in the dried grass. The chance of additional arrests depends "on how much informa tion we get from those in custody,” Hamilton said. "There's nobody waiting in the wings (to be arrested) but we know it would take more than two c-T *—F < c . ■’T v e people to keep the operation go ing," he said. lowans vote for Mondale DES MOINES — Presidential can didate Walter Mondale was the victor in a straw poll of more than 4,000 Democratic activists in Iowa and edged President Reagan in a statewide survey of both Republicans and Democrats. The former vice president, who's from neighboring Min nesota, thus got a double boost in the first state to pick delegates to the Democratic National Convention. At the state Democratic Party's annual fundraising dinner Satur day night, Mondale garnered 47 percent of the votes cast in an Associated Press straw poll, topp ing California Sen. Alan Cranston, who polled 37 percent. Of the 4,143 votes cast, Mondale got 1,948 to Cranston's 1,534. Third was Ohio Sen. John Glenn with 5.9 percent. Calvin Klein move over LOUISVILLE — You are what you wear, and the delegates to the Republican women's convention here found a veritable pachyderm paradise available for proclaiming their political affiliation through their clothing. Among the items hawked at Commonwealth Convention Center were "Women Love Reagan" T-shirts, "Ronnie and Nancy" wristwatches and red, white or blue polo shirts featuring a small elephant or a keeled-over donkey. Gerald Sears of Santa Monica, Calif., offered GOP jewelry, with sparkly elephant stickpins and earrings, "Kiss Me, I'm Republican" pins and inaugural medallions. And for carrying home those political purchases? Canvas totes announcing "Politics Is My Bag." ••r"*' r e “mi *r n i'ii.n All Architecture Books On Sole • ARCHITECTURAL CLASSICS * • Site Design & Construction Detail • regularly $26.95 • NOW $21 56 • • A Pattern Language - Alexander • regularly $45.00* NOW $3600 • •Architectural Graphic Standards* regulariy $9995 • NOW $79.96 • • Sale ends October 15th • Textbooks not included • Limited to stock on hand • Cash register sales only • No other discounts applicable 13th & Kincaid Mon -Fh 7 30 5:30 Sat 10:00 3 00 General Books 686-3510 Lambda Chi Alpha AXA A rare opportunity to become a founder of a fraternity. Bob Curran, Associate Direc tor of Chapter Services, and Tom Lawson, Chapter Consultant for Lambda Chi Alpha International Fraternity, will be meeting with men who are interested in becoming founding members of a new Fraternity chapter at the University of Oregon campus. The two Fraternity representatives will be at Century Room B in the Erb Memorial Union, Monday, October 10 through Fri day, October 14 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. They will be there to answer any question or to provide information about Lambda Chi Alpha. You may also contact Bob or Tom at The Greentree Inn at 485-2727.