Food Service Fountain Court Cafe MEXICAN FIESTA! Mexican line featuring: Burrito Supremes, Taco Salads, and much more! Still a great place for: • Breakfast • Salads • Homemade Soups and Chili • Delicious Pastries • and More ?j i GET STUFFED! I wanna stuff you an’ yer favorite wid any 3-ingredient small Southsider pizza anna pitcher a soft drink er beer fer inter/national From Associated Press reports Marines at highest alert BEIRUT — U.S. Marines were ordered into sand-bagged bunkers Tuesday and told to "shoot to kill" anyone ap proaching their camp after three trucks that officials feared might be filled with explosives drove nearby. "There have been three vehicles spotted driving around the area. There are suspicions that they could contain explosives," said Marine Capt. Wayne Jones. Of ficials gave no further information about the trucks, but the Marines remained on alert throughout the day. The Pentagon said the death toll from Sunday's terrorist bombing of a U.S. Marine command post rose to 214 as six more bodies were recovered and one man died of injuries in a military hospital in West Germany. The suicide strike was carried out by a man driving a truck pack ed with a ton of explosives. It was the bloodiest attack against the U.S. military since Vietnam. About 300 Marine troops arrived at the camp to replace their fallen comrades and the Marine com mandant, Gen. Paul Kelley, arriv ed to inspect the jagged concrete wreckage of the Marine building. Kelley said he thought security at the base was "very ade quate" and that it would have been difficult to prevent the attack. Land veto overridden WASHINGTON - Congress voted Tuesday to override a presidential veto of legislation giv ing 3.1 acres of federally owned land to Oregon families who believed they owned it for decades.The tract is located about 30 miles southeast of Eugene near Dorena Lake in Culp Creek. The action marked the third time Congress has voided a veto by Pres. Ronald Reagan. "They bought the property, they paid for it, they paid taxes on it, and now the government wants to take it away from them," said Democratic Rep. Jim Weaver, who r represents the district that in cludes the disputed tract. Based on a private but er roneous survey, the land, original ly settled under the Homestead Act, was sold off by the owner. Parcels of the 3.1-acre tract along with nongovernment land are now owned by six elderly familcs and the telephone company. A railroad company also has a right of-way on a portion. "It may not seem like a major issue — it is not in the light of other issues before us," said Sen. Mark Hatfield R-Ore., the chair man of the Appropriations Com mittee. "But it is very important to some individuals and it's a matter of principle to the people of our state." "This move represents the affir mation of a principle, a principle that the federal government can be equitable, just and caring in its actions," Hatfield said. The legislation, first proposed more than 20 years ago, was pro mpted by a 1941 private survey of the area that erroneously included land owned by the Interior Department's Bureau of Land Management. Reagan cuts commission WASHINGTON — Pres. Ronald Reagan fired half the Civil Rights Commission to make room for his own team of conservatives Tues day in a move that effectively puts the gadfly agency out of business at least temporarily. Outraged civil rights groups said the three ousted members, appointed by two previous presidents, were guilty only of criticizing the administration's record. A bipartisan effort was launched in the Senate to reconstitute the commission as an independent arm of Congress and House Democrats unanimously approv ed a statement ‘’strongly” disap proving of Reagan's action, which it said was taken "without cause." In one stroke last May, Reagan proposed three nominees to replace members held over from the Carter and Ford administra tions. The holdovers are Mary Berry, Blandina Ramirez and Mur ray Saltzman. In a statement Tuesday, the White House said those three jobs now are terminated. In firing the holdovers, Reagan called on the Senate to confirm his appointees: Morris Abram, John Bunzel and Robert Destro. They all share Reagan's belief that quota systems and mandatory busing are inappropriate ways to end racial discrimination. The firing leaves the commis sion without its required quorum of four, meaning it cannot even meet until at least one more member is confirmed by the Senate. Reaction to Reagan's move was swift. “We are appalled by the abrupt firing of three dedicated servants of civil rights," said )ohn Jacob, president of the National Urban League. “The administration's move is an insult to the civil rights community and to the Congress which has been searching for ways to preserve an effective Civil Rights Commission." Negotiations have been under way in the Senate toward a com promise that would expand the commission, allowing the current members to remain on the job and some of Reagan's nominees to be sworn in. The commission, created in 1957, is an advisory body that in vestigates discrimination. It has no enforcement powers. It sub mits reports to the president and Congress and, over the years, many of its recommendations have become law. LA newsman wounded LOS ANGELES — Jerry Dunphy, a 20-year veteran newsman and anchor of the highest rated newscast in Los Angeles, remain ed hospitalized Tuesday with gun shot wounds from unknown assailants in an apparent random attack, authorities said. Police said they believed Dun phy was the victim of a "drive-by shooting" Monday night at an in tersection near the ABC television complex in Hollywood. Dunphy, 62, was driving his dark blue Rolls-Royce convertible. His passenger, makeup artist San dra Marshall, 36, was shot once in the right arm and was hospitalized in stable condition at Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center. Dunphy, reported in satisfactory condition with bullet wounds to the neck and arm, has been an an chorman at KABC since 1976. -- CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN RETAIL MANAGEMENT INVITES YOU TO ATTEND A COFFEE AND ORIENTATION NIGHT Date: Wednesday • October 26,1983 Time: 7:00-8:00 p.m. Location: 110-111 E.M.U. This meeting is Stop One in pursuing your career in retail management with a major Northwest retailer: Frederick & Nelson currently operates 15 stores in Oregon and Washington, with corporate headquarters in Seattle, Washington. Our representatives will tell you about our Management Training Program and career opportunities with emphasis on merchandise management. Stop IWo is to sign up for an interview through your placement center when we are back on campus.