BP W I Middle Eastern Kabobs Monday Night Specialty • Steak and Seafood • Expanded Duck and Lamb menu • Banquet room for up to 70 people • Home catering available (Belly dancer available upon request for your banquet) Lounge open 11:00 • closing Lunch 11 2 Restaurant and Lounge Dinner Mon. Thurs. 5:00 - 9:00 Reservations: 746-5241 Fri. & Sat. 5:00 9:30 117 s. 14th, Springfield Sy's Pizza Free Campus Delivery Monday Nlte Football Special Call Sy's for delicious New York Style Pizza 686-9598 1 FREE Topping with any size pizza Your Choice of Regular or Sicilian (thick) Crust Delivery Hours: 5:30-Midnight Don’t Forget to Ask for Your Two Free Drinks With Every Delivery Sy's Pizza 1211 Alder On Campus 686-9598 >8| L1Q Bookstore-^ Special Purchase Records & Tapes 98 & up Cassettes or LP's CLASSICAL • JAZZ ROCK • COUNTRY Something for Everyone! ★ while supplies last Serving Our Members Since 1920 13th & Kincaid Mon - Fn 7 30 5 50 Sat 1000 5 00 SupplMB 686 4331 inter/national From Associated Press reports Israel vows retribution JERUSALEM — On Sunday Israel began burying its dead from the terrorist bombing in southern Lebanon and vowed to "strike back sevenfold" in retribution for any more attacks. Israel accused the Syrians of helping engineer the blast that killed 28 Israelis and 32 Lebanese and Palestinians Friday at an Israeli military headquarters in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Families held funerals for 20 Israeli victims on Sunday. The bombing caused the worst loss of life in hostile action since Israel's invasion of Lebanon in |une 1982 to destroy Palestine Liberation Organization guerrilla bases, a campaign Israel calls "Operation Peace for Galilee.” There has been speculation that the Cabinet would order Israeli occupation forces to seal off southern Lebanon as part of a security crackdown following the bombing. But the Cabinet took no action at its regular Sunday meeting. After the meeting, a senior of ficial who spoke on condition he not be identified denied reports that Israeli warplanes bombed Syrian positions in the retaliatory air strikes against Palestinian posi tions after the bomb attack. At one of the funerals. Interior Minister Yosef Burg vowed Israel would "strike back sevenfold" tor every attack like the Tyre bombing. Israel radio said Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, visiting bomb vic tims at Haifa's Rambam Hospital in northern Israel, said his govern ment would do all possible to eradicate what he tailed terrorism in Lebanon. Though the nation grieved, some felt gratified because of PLO chief Yasser Arafat's predicament in northern Lebanon. Syrian backed mutineers in his guerrilla organization have been besieging Arafat and his backers in fierce fighting in and around Tripoli. "The situation in Tripoli is again a reminder of what has become of the PLO" as a result of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, Cabinet Secretary Dan Meridor told reporters after the Cabinet meeting. "I would be careful about ex pressing optimism or pessimism, but up to this point one can ex press satisfaction," he said. Greyhound won't talk PHOENIX — The chief negotiator for striking Greyhound Lines employees accused the bus company Sunday of refusing to resume talks to end the nation wide walkout and calk'd on pickets to carry signs saying Greyhound won't bargain in good faith. In a statement to 12,700 members of the Greyhound coun cil of the Amalgamated Transit Workers, chief negotiator Harry Rosenblum said he had "very skimpy details to report" but that he had asked the company to "re establish the dialogue" which was broken off last Monday night when the 31-member union coun cil rejected what the company described as a final offer. The strike was postponed 48 hours to minimize disruption to the public. "There has been no movement by management to meet with us on the issues in dispute," Rosemblum said. Company officials could not be reached for comment. Corporate headquarters were closed, and home phones of several spokesmen went unanswered. Gas prices still falling LOS ANGELES - Retail gas prices continued to fall for the 12th straight week despite Iran's threats to close oil shipping through the Persian Gulf, an oil in dustry analyst said Sunday. Confidence in continued oil supplies remains high, said the analyst, Dan Lundberg. That is in marked contrast with 1979, when the Iranian revolution produced "lines at the pump and much public panic" despite ready availability of gasoline, he said. At that time, prices shot up from 68 cents a gallon to $1.04 per gallon. Lundberg's latest survey show ed the average price for a gallon of gas nationwide at just under $1.22 — down 0.87 cents from Oct. 21. Lundberg, who publishes an oil industry newsletter and surveys 17,500 U.S. filling stations every two weeks, described the attitude of oil consumers and marketers as "between confidence and complacency." He said the sense of security is not a false one. "The world would be quite able to take a short-term closing of the gult in its stride," Lundberg said. Math majors take note PHILOMATH — A consulting engineer is making plans to open an exhibit in the Benton County Historical Museum here for a dinosaur of calculating, the slide rule. But Arthur Orans love for slide rules goes beyond the museum exhibit. He said he has formed the Philomath International Slide Rule Society, a group dedicated to col lecting slide rules before they are lost or destroyed. "They literally disappeared," Orans said of slide rules. "They're dinosaurs." He said he disagrees with some teachers who allow students to use electronic calc ulators to figure out mathematical problem. He said that while students can get answers this way, they may not be able to work out the problem themselves. "If we had slide rules now, maybe those kids who make change at fast-food restaurants would know what they are doing and get it right," he said. Fountain Court Cafe Luncheon Specials Served Daily 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. All Specials $1.95 MONDAY Chicken Nuggets with BBQ or Sweet & Sour Sauce Buttered Rice Sirloin Tips in Sour Cream Sauce over Poppy Seed Noodles TUESDAY Baked Ham with Raisin Sauce Scallapoed Potatoes Stuffed Green Peppers in Tomato Sauce Saffron Rice Mexican Food Bar Burrito Supreme/Fried Burrito Taco & Enchiladas Spanish Rice & Refried Beans THURSDAY Lamb Curry Rice Pilaf Macaroni with Ham & Cheese Sauce Salad Bar By the ounce 15c WEDNESDAY Teriyaki Chicken and Steamed Rice Salisbury Steak with Mushroom & Sour Cream Topping Potato Snow Seafood / Broccoli Quiche FRIDAY Seafood Platter of Breaded Cod Scallops & Oysters Fried Potatoes Roast Turkey with Dressing Cranberry Sauce Sweet Potatoes with Marshmallow topping Chef’s Choice Soup Bar Two special soups and Chili served daily J