Featuring: French Roast Coffee Homemade Donuts Yoplait Yogurt “Gyros (YEAR-OS) Sandwiches” Vegetarian Sandwiches Open 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Reminder: Diners have first priority for Skylight Refectory tables between 11:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Enjoy -X=J Own your own phone & never pay rent again! Get one today, prices start at *29.95 At your Bookstore In electronic* ( Recycle this paper ftecyc* tub pop* w»yu. «*» w*~| FUO= BOOKSTORE Order Your Holiday Photo Greeting Cards Now! Early Bird Prices effective through November 15, order now! Slim-Line Card Prices Quantity Early Bird Special (before 11-15-83) Everyday Low Prices 25 $ 8.99 $10.99 50 $15.99 $19.99 100 $27.99 $34.99 200 $47.99 $59.99 Imprinted Holiday Photo Greeting Cards with the customer s name are available at a S2 SO set up charge, plus 5' per card Thare Is a maximum ol two lines This ser vice will take 4 EXTRA DAYS In the plant Imprinting is available m red ink only 13th & Kincaid Mon Fri 7:30-5:30 Sat 10:00-3:00 Supplies 086-4331 inter/national From AwocUled Pmi reports PLO, Syria effect truce TRIPOLI — Palestinian rebels backed by Syria rained hundreds of shells on PLO chairman Yasser Arafat's last Middle East bastion Wednesday, but an Arafat spokesman said a truce was ar ranged later in the day. “We pray this is serious but we are very skeptical" the truce will hold, said the spokesman, who asked not to be identified. Wednesday's withering barrage cornered Arafat in this northern port city. His spokesman said shelling diminished “significant ly" after the truce agreement, but Arafat strongholds in the Baddawi refugee camp and Tripoli still were being hit. There was no immediate confir mation of a cease-fire by the rebels, but sources said earlier that Arab nations had reached "an agreement in principle" on a truce. The rebel barrage prevented the Palestine Liberation Organization leader from visiting loyalist holdouts at the besieged Baddawi refugee camp outside Tripoli. Black smoke from raging fires hung over the port city of 500,000. But Arafat visited maimed sup porters in hospitals, roving the streets in a chauffered Jeep while shells from rebels in the north and east occasionally slammed into neighborhoods near his office. The PLO mutineers have chased most of Arafat's estimated 8,000 loyalists into their last stronghold in the Middle East — Tripoli, 50 miles north of Beirut. More than 1,000 people have been killed since the fighting began Nov. 3, according to Lebanese police. The rebels claim Arafat has betrayed the PLO's aim of wresting a homeland from Israel. Arafat claims the rebels have been deceived by Syria, which he says wants to dominate the PLO. Committee OK's Clark WASHINGTON — The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee today approved the nomination of William Clark as Secretary of the Interior, clearing the way for the full Senate to con firm him to the Cabinet position. The committee voted 1E>-3, with three Democrats opposed, to send the nomination to the Senate. Sen. James McClure, R-ldaho, the committee chairman, said he hoped the Senate could act this week. But he said he had been promised by Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., that "we'll stay in session long enough to get it done." The Senate is scheduled to adjourn at the end of next week. Clark will succeed James Watt in the secretary's post. Watt resign ed after public outrage over his description of the members of an advisory commission as "a black,.. a woman, two Jews and a cripple." The White House announced today that Watt's resignation had taken effect Tuesday. Kesey nails R-G with suit EUGENE — Author Ken Kesey has filed a $4 million suit against the company that owns The Register-Guard newspaper of Eugene, alleging a headline was false and defamatory. Kesey's suit against The Guard Publishing Co. takes issue with a headline published in the April 20 edition of newspaper that said, "Cocaine trial raises names: Rust, Kesey, Safley." The headline naming Kesey ap peared atop a front-page story about the Lane County Circuit Court trial of Raymond Sander Ainge, who was found guilty in May of attempted murder and four drug possession charges. The story said the names of Kesey, Lane County Commis sioner Jerry Rust and Eugene real estate broker Mike Safley were raised by a Eugene police officer in courtroom efforts to test the credibility of a paid informant who worked with police in the Ainge cocaine investigation. The lawsuit alleges Kesey delivered to the newspaper's publisher on May 2 a written de mand for a correction or retrac tion but on May 13 the newspaper refused to correct or retract the headline. Register-Guard Managing Editor Tony Baker said the newspaper's lawyers were aware of Kesey's lawsuit, filed Monday in circuit court. Baker declined further comment. Two drop Daikon cases EUGENE — Two of the 17 women who sued Daikon Shield maker A.H. Robins Co. have drop ped their suits because they don't want their cases to come to trial, the attorney for the two women says. Attorney Michael Williams of Eugene said the women chose to withdraw their complaints on Monday. Neither woman received any compensation or damages from Robins, he said. Williams declined further com ment on the withdrawals Tuesday because of an order from Judge Robert Belloni forbidding at torneys to talk to reporters about the suits while the cases are being tried. The 17 cases had been con 1 Financial Aid for Students There are over $3 billion in financial assistance being offered to students yearly. Many students don't apply because they feel that either their grades aren't high enough or that their parents earn too much money Yet some scholarships and grants have completely different guidelines Over $100 million in assistance each year isn't even applied for! National Guidance Service Can Help! We arc a computerized service with a vast data bank to guarantee the college student from 4 to 25 sources of financial aid geared to your needs The cost is only $45 and results are guaranteed or your money back NGS — The service you can’t afford not to use For free and complete details, SEND A SELF ADDRESSED, STAMPED 9” ENVELOPE TO: NATIONAL GUIDANCE SERVICE P.O. BOX 700021 EUGENE, OREGON 97401 J solidated for the trial in U.S. District Court in Eugene, along with a suit filed by the husband of one of the women. All of the plaintiffs are seeking unspecified damages from the drug company. In opening statements Tuesday, attorneys for Robins told the jury that the intrauterine device was not responsible for the injuries claimed by the women. Attorney Carol Hewitt of Portland told jurors that some of the plaintiffs in the case have not tried to become pregnant. Each of the plaintiffs, all past or present Oregon residents, con tends that her use of the Daikon Shield IUD exposed her to pelvic inflammatory disease that scarred and damaged her reproductive organs. Have M-16; will travel BEND — Looking to get into a new line of work? How about becoming a mercenary? Robert Baker just might be able to help you. Baker runs his "Ex ecutive Protection Agency" in a garage in Bend, linking employers in need of mercenaries, bodyguards and adventurers with prospective employees respon ding to his ads in "Soldier of For tune" magazine. Dozens of people send letters and resumes in response to the ads. Baker uses a computer to match qualified applicants with available jobs. "It's an ugly business, the real mercenary stuff," the father of two told the Bend Bulletin in a copyright interview. "You're not going to be saving the helpless and fighting for the lost cause." Baker, a Vietnam veteran, laments that business is slow. Most of his applicants are under qualified, and many are "kooks," he said. Still, the responses he gets surprise him. "What I didn't expect were the guys my age who know better," he said. "I didn't expect a whole bunch of middle-aged, middle class, college-educated vets sen ding me resumes." Baker's applicants tend to stress their military skills, chiefly their ability to use weapons, bazookas, flame throwers and anything else that kills, maims and stuns. "They always get carried away with their weapons qualifica tions," he said. "Most of them think somebody is going to pay them $50,000 to go kill peasants. A lot of them just miss the point. The typical movie profile of the gun-toting, grenade throwing fighter for just causes is nonsense." Baker had combat intelligence training in the Army and, after ser ving in Vietnam and being discharged in 1967, went on reserve status with the Army Special Forces. r--^ ♦ ♦ Were Great Fun All Week Long at Gtalbfi0s 440 Coburg Rd. } 343 1221 . ■ ■ ■ -♦♦4 '