--'l VOLVO Owners AlpJralmport s /Service \ ^ Specialists in Volvo service We offer a preventive maintenance/safety inspection for FREE 12th & Mam. Sptd. • 726-1808 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 Dinner Mon Thurs 5:00 9:00 Fri & Sat 5:00 9:30 woe. Restaurant and Lounge Reservations 746-5241 117 S 14th, Springfield ^ Sy's Pizza Free ^ Campus Delivery Special SUNDAY ONLY! call 686-9598 75c off $1.25 off any Small or Medium any Large L Your Choice of Regular or Sicilian (thick) Crust Delivery Hours 5:30-Midnight Offer good this Sunday Onfy Don’t Forget to Ask for Your Two Free Drinks With Every Delivery Sy's Pizza _ 1211 Alder on campus 686-9598JP mlrmali'inai 1 i HOUSE IPAACAXES] Inlemebonal House of Pancakes Welcome To Our House Serving Daily Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Specials OPEN 24 HOURS -COUPON - Breakfast Special Buy Any Breakfast and Receive a Second Breakfast of Equal or Lesser Value for JUST $1.99 Valid anytime thru November 27, 1983 Not valid with any other promotion — — —-COUPON International House of Pancakes Restaurant 355 E. Broadway, Eugene 345-9976 inter/national From Associated Press reports Seven demand impeachment WASHINGTON — Seven Democratic members of Congress called for Pres. Reagan's impeach ment Thursday, charging that he violated the Constitution in order ing U.S. troops into Grenada last month. The congressmen cited Article I, which grants Congress the right to declare war and other sections that cover U.S. treaty obligations and the rights of its citizens. "The president's invasion of Grenada is illegal and unconstitu tional and, I am convinced, is an impeachable offense," one of the seven. Rep. Ted Weiss of New York, said in a released statement. "This resolution is being introduc ed... after Congress has ex hausted other remedies." The other congressmen calling for Reagan's impeachment are |ohn Conyers of Michigan; Julian Dixon and Mervyn Dymally of California; Henry Gonzalez and Mickey Leland of Texas, and Par ren Mitchell of Maryland. Youth shot during arrest EUGENE — A 17-year-old Eugene youth who was shot by an under cover police officer during a theft arrest has been charged with the attempted murder of the officer, Eugene police say. Jonathan Higgins remained under guard at Sacred Heart General Hospital Thursday, where he was being treated for gunshot wounds to the right shoulder, back and chest. He was listed in good condition. Higgins was shot by police of ficer Gary Nauta shortly before noon Tuesday near some tennis courts where the two had met to discuss the sale of stolen musical equipment, said Eugene Police Chief James Packard. Packard said Nauta "pleaded" with the youth to quit struggling as he was being placed under ar rest. Nauta "began to lose control of the situation" and fired his 38-caliber service revolver three times as the youth turned away and reached for a loaded sawed off shotgun in his waistband. Packard said. “It is unfortunate that the situa tion had to escalate to that point, but it appears the shooting was justified,” Packard said Wednes day after reviewing preliminary findings of a police department investigation. Nauta, an undercover officer with the Eugene department's vice and narcotics unit, was on special assignment helping theft investigators at the time of the shooting. After the shooting he was placed on an indefinite leave of absence with pay, a standard procedure in shooting incidents. Syria fires at U.S. jets BEIRUT — U.S. jets came under attack for the first time in Lebanon Thursday when Syrian gunners fired missiles at carrier-based planes. At Beirut airport, small arms fire hit Marine positions. Assistant White House press secretary Anson Franklin said the jets were on a "routine" mission when they came under fire from an unidentified ground site in central Lebanon. He did not specify the type of fire, but Beirut radios said surface-to-air missiles were used. American Marines came under small-arms fire in the afternoon along the eastern perimeter of their base at Beirut airport. The Marines returned fire, and the shooting ended within minutes with no casualties, said Marine spokesman Capt. Wayn^ Jones. The shooting heightened ten sion that has been escalating since suicide bombings killed 239 American and 58 French troops in Beirut Oct. 23, and 28 Israelis and 32 Lebanese prisoners in Tyre Nov. 4. The U.S., French and Israeli governments blame Moslem fanatics operating behind Syrian lines in Lebanon. Meanwhile, pressure mounted on Yasser Arafat to leave the nor thern city of Tripoli and end the Palestinian guerrilla war that has killed at least 1,000 people. Italy ordered two helicopter-equipped warships Thursday to stand by for a possible evacuation of Arafat from Tripoli, where a cease-fire collapsed less than 24 hours after it was arranged by oil-rich Arab nations. Arafat has repeatedly said he would leave Tripoli if asked to do so, and reiterated Thursday, "I will leave if the people of Tripoli ask me to leave. I am a guest here.” Asked where he would go to if he did leave, the PLO chairman said he would return to Tunis, where he set up headquarters after the evacuation of guerrillas from Israeli-ringed Beirut in 198? Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy also urged Arafat to flee Lebanon for Libya and guaranteed his safety "in defending himself before any Palestinian or Arab questioning," Libya's |ANA news agency said. Judge annuls internment SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge Thursday vacated the con viction of a Japanese-American who evaded internment during World War II, saying the govern ment relied on unsubstantiated facts, distortions and the racist views of a military commander to justify the detentions. "This is a day we've waited for for 40 years," said Dale Minami, attorney for defendant Fred Korematsu, one of 120,000 Japanse-Aermicans ordered in terned during World War II. "Up until now, there has not been a judicial declaration that what was done to Japanese Americans was wrong and un constitutional," he said. U.S. District Judge Marijyn Hall Patel vacated Korematsu's*40-year old conviction, dismissing the in dictment it was based upon and going a step further by accepting his petition. The petition said the military fabricated evidence of Japanese American espionage and sabotage and kept that knowledge from the U.S. Surpreme Court, which subsequently upheld the convic tions of Korematsu and two other men for resisting the wartime order. "What happened 40 years ago involved my family and my per sonal life, and I had to do some real deep thinking in order to reopen this case again," Koremat su said. "I am very happy I did, because this is important not only for Japanese-American citizens but for all Americans who might get involved in similar conditions." 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