FAMOUS I STAR* I HAMBURGER I PffWO tht* I coupon it waive J r«MNHSUf I)Umhuryprf k* only I (dww r»!ra) 99 I imil ’> h • ;• < I o^fcn K»piiw'» X* '* t | Brojdvvjwnd Hdvjrd j The Oregon Daily Emerald production department is accepting applications tor ad designers and pagmators Positions start in August and in September THE JOBS AD DESIGNER Use Multi Ad Creator to desion ads Select type faces Use scanner and software to input art PAGINATOR Use QuarkXPress to build ODE news pages Follow layouts and work with editors HOW TO GET A JOB Come to Room 300, EMU and till out an application Deadline is Thursday. May 27 Eligible applicants must be enrolled at the U ot 0 tor the 1993-94 school Room 300, EMU ft* Orapw (Hfly t **»*« *% w «M! Odpodu»ry wnp**** NosUluu&U *7op. GotUosU (j44d\i Fred Strickler A\Liiic %i%mcio\L: Janet Deseutner & Deborah Miller Soreng Theatre Hull Center Sunday, May 23 7:30 p.m. Admillio*: AdtMl $12, Svuotl attd Siudftli $8 :~1 Gas Goliath terminates lease on station PORTLAND (AP) — Barry Devi* liav's his lift! on faith Texaco ln< prefers profit. So it rame ns no surprise that the gasoline giant terminated the leases Wednesday on the three Oregon stations run by Davis, who began ( losing the stations this year from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday to observe the Sabbath Texaco also filed a s»* nnd law suit against Davis, asking that U S Distric t fudge Helen Frye require him to surrender the sta tions by Mav ifH Frye ordered Davis earlier this month to r«0|M*n the stations in Salem, Eugene and Clackamas to comply with Ins Texaco dealer ship contract. Texaco filed its first lawsuit against Davis last month, claim ing Davit had operated the sta tions for 2* hours a day for years and that the clotures that began this year had ( ost Texaco both profits and customers. Davit, however, has continued the c leisures, despite Frye * order. "All through my Ufa I have made my decisions, gwxi or bad. and I hove lived by them," ha said Wednesday "I made a promise to God. and I will fulfill inv promise to God. I'm not oven thinking of hacking down." Davis, 50, said he is angry at Texaco's effort to terminate his leases and had no intention of turning the other cheek. "What they’ve done is stomped all over my < ivii rights." Davis saul "It's a whole different ball game now " Davis said Frye's ruling vio lates his < (institutional right to worship without government interference “They're running a complete game of intimidation and coer cion," he said. Davis' attorney had said ear lier that Texaco did not want to terminate its contracts with Davis because he had sold so much of its gasoline But Texaco representatives confronted Davis Wednesday morning at his station in Salem, handing him letters of notifica tion The letters cited his alleged violations of the court order and his contract with Texaco. "Unfortunately, we have been unable to resolve this issue." the letters said. "We regret this, and we regret that we are compelled to terminate the lease and sales agreement." Davis' attorney. David Shan non, said he would challenge the termination under the U S. Petroleum Marketing Practices Act, which requires 90 days' notice before termination and reasonable grounds for the ter mination. "Each provision of an agree ment has to bo measurer! against whether it is objectively reason able." Shannon said. Texaco spokesman Norm Stanley said the company’s main concern is maintaining service to its customers. “Our whole effort is to keep the stations open because of a lot of our customers are frustrat ed that they can’t get fuel from sundown Friday until sundown Saturday," Stanley said. "We’ve had nothing but the greatest respect for Mr Davis and we art- doing this with great reluctance," Stanley said. “But it is something wo feel we have to do." Russia, U.S. near Bosnian plan WASHINGTON (AF) — Top American and Russian diplo mat i< offi< mis grappled Thurs day with wavs to slow the bloodletting in Bosnia and du< lured thin were approach NATIONAL ing on agrewnent Admlnist ration sourt<*s said measures under con sideration ini luded polic ing the border with Ser bia to see il weapons were getting through and set ting up sale havens to protect disploi ed i mlians Krone e is the prtncijwl pro|>onent of the approach under consideration Secretary ol State Warren Christopher and Russian Foreign Munster Andrei Korvrov spoke with Krone h Foreign Minister Alain JupjHi hy telephone ol their sec ond meeting of the day at the State Department The sources, dcs lining to l» identified, said Juppe would come to Washington to see Christopher on Saturday Another indication of progress was Christopher's announcement that he and Kozyrev would take the results of their talks to President Bill Clinton at the White House on Friday Diplomatic soon vs said ihv focus was not on mil* itiirv measures. as proposed June ! l>v ('.tinton But U S offii mis said that remained the "preferred option" and hail not Iveen abandoned "We are drawing closer together on a number of elements." Christopher said after his second ses sum with Kozyrev Christopher said the conversation would be broadened to include the From h and British gov ernments This indicated am new initiativ e for end ing the H-month war in the former Yugoslavia would !*• launched at the t anted Nations I he l ant ed States Russia Britain and Fram e hold four of the five permanent seats on the Sei uritv Council China holds the fifth. "That's something we have to look at in the next few days," said a U.S. official, who spoke on con dition of anonymity. Clinton emphasized again, meanwhile, that the United States would not act unilaterally. 'Everything the United States does in Bosnia, which is in the heart of Europe, must f>« done not on our own but through the United Nations or through NATO." Clinton said in an interview with MTV news. This is not a problem we can solve." Clinton said. "A lot of those groups have been fighting not only for decades but for centuries, and the only way we i an solve it is through the United Nations." Clinton added: "If we can stop this ethnii cleans ing. from a purely humanitarian point of view we ought to try to do it We have to do it w ith our allies " Kozyrev, who gist visited Yugoslavia, said he and Christopher agreed on "liasic political principles' in considering a joint plan of action. "No doubt this w ill lead to positive results." he told reporters. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher would not elaborate, except to agree that "there are < ommon elements in our thinking Kozyrev returned to the State Department later in the day, flashing a thumbs-up sign but saving nothing as lie entered the building He had left Vitaly Churkin, a deputy foreign minister, behind to confer with American diplomats, including Assis tant Secretary of State Stephen Oxman, negotiator Reginald Bartholomew and Russian specialist Strofie Talbott "The discussions wore private Wo don t expe< t to give you a blow -by-blow ac i ount or make any announc ements," Boucher said Boucher dec IiihhI to suv whether Christopher stdl hud strong reservations about the idea of establishing vile havens to protec t c iv ihans from attac k. Pushed primarily by Franc e, it might require military (ore e from the air and the ground to implement Kozyrev earlier stopped in Rome to talk, to oth er Western foreign ministers about how to induc e Bosnian Serbs to stop their assault on Muslims Die situation, described by Christopher to Congress on Tuesday as "a problem front hell." is c omplicated by fierce fighting between Muslims and Croats, unof ficial allies against the Serbs. We’ll Beat Anyori^! COUPON ON SCREEN PRINTED T-SHIRTS, JACKETS. SWEATSHIRTS. CAPS ANO OTHER TEXTILES lor GREEKS • OORMS • CLUBS 3RD C LAWRENCE (NEXT TO REI) . 344-7842 A QiVl»rQN OI» TMf iMAOl INHANCIMtNT QWQU» _ "Come in tonight! Four dead ATF agents eulogized WASHINGTON (AP) — The four federal agents who died m the Feb. 28 gun battle with David Koresh and his follow ers were eulogized Thursday as puhlii servants who stood up to "a violent criminal who was ready to harm anyone in his way.” "These were the good guys just wanting to go after the bad guys." added Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen in an emotional tribute to the Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms agents slain in the initial assault Speaking to a hushed crowd of several hundred at the National Law Enforce ment Officers Memorial. Bentsen recalled his own experiences in World War II when comrades fell in battle and he questioned the ran domness of their deaths. "I'll never ever know how deep the losses have hurt you," Bentsen told the fami lies Til never share your emptiness No one < an But I'll understand when you ask over and over again 'Why? Why did it have to happen to them?' No matter how many times you ask. I'm sorry hut there'll never t>e an answer." Unitrr>ity Thtvtrr Prv>cnl< KING LEAR by William Shakespeare Robinson Theatre University ol Oregon Evening performances—8 til) p m May 21. 25, 27, 2*. 2