Pregnant? Talk with a friend. 1.800.848. LOVE possiblypregnant.org Vleai for a Deal/' 2n •‘Best Breakfast' 2nd ace, Register-Guard .f ^ Daily titi&Tctfu, i c»yb * deyv m ■ hugene weekly, iy eats in town.” Tgjif0 visitors v/rtftrt Voy Sports Illustrated on Campus 2nd Place, Eugene Weekly, 1999 * “Best Dinner Under $12, * * P* * *1( ' ’’'»><* lpj 1 Place ‘'Beat: Breakfast,’" 2nd Place, “Be* Soup,” 3rd Place Eugene Weekly, 2U(0) •"BegXj^ ■ I ■ & I illQMWoor, FT * VJ Defining the taste of Eugene for over 25 years. 2588 Willamette St. 541687-8201 "1340 Aider Street 541-687-0355 How to Survive the Holiday Interrogation By Kassia Dellabough The holidays are upon us once again and most students are look ing forward to a few weeks of rest and relaxation over the winter break. You’ll have time to sleep in, reacquaint yourself with balanced meals, and even spend quality time with family and friends. Everyone will want to know what you’ve been up to at school—and what you’re going to do after college. Such uncomplicated questions are meant to inspire pleasant, good-hu mored conversation. So how come you’re breaking out in a cold sweat? Right there, in the middle of an otherwise lovely meal. Aunt Jeanne is going to ask what sort of job you can get with a Sociology major these days. Then Cousin Lou will want to know how, exactly, you’re planning to pay off those student loans with out any income. In a moment, an innocuous family gathering could explode into, full-fledged career in terrogation. And you thought finals week was stressful. The UO Career Center can help you navigate this holiday gaunt let. Your family and friends want to know about your future plans, and we can help you make some. Graduation might seem a long way off, but winter term is the perfect time to start lining up interviews or cultivating a summer internship. Throughout December, the Career Center offers drop-in career coun seling from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Our coun selors can help you identify a major you’ll love, research internships, take career assessments, or formu late a job-search plan. We can help you find all the answers you’ll need, just in time for the holidays. Call 346-3235 to set up a per sonalized appointment today, or stop by the Career Center offices on the second floor of Hendricks Hall. Career Center DREAM IT. PLAN IT. DO IT. 220 Hendricks Hall • 346-3235 . http://uocareer.uoregon.edu ■ Tsunami recovery New road commemorates U.S. goodwill in Indonesia BY DENIS D. GRAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LAMPUUK, Indonesia — There aren’t many places in the Islamic world these days where they name streets after American presidents, past or present. But through the tsunami-devastated heart of this vil lage, embedded in a highly conserva tive Muslim society, runs George Bush Bill Clinton Road. “We are one big family and those who help us are our brothers. So Americans are our brothers. They are in our hearts,” says Hasballah Ahba, looking out from atop the village mosque over his birthplace that the giant wave obliterated and U.S. aid is bringing back to life. Just days after the tsunami struck on Dec. 26, U.S. military helicopters launched from an offshore flotilla rushed in food, water and medicine to desperate people stranded along the Aceh coast of this Indonesian is land, saving thousands of lives. Since then, the U.S. government and the American private sector have com mitted some $1.6 billion to resurrect communities like Lampuuk. Ten months later, the helicopters were back in the sky, along with an Army field hospital and construc tion battalion, when an earthquake ravaged Muslim-dominated Kash mir, and the reactions of some vic tims to the Americans echoed those heard in Indonesia. “When they do something against Muslims, we condemn them. Now as they are helping us, we should ap preciate them,” said Yar Moham mad, a farmer in Muzaffarabad, the ruined capital of Pakistan’s portion of the divided Himalayan region. Washington needs the hitherto ef fective support of both these countries in its counterterrorism campaign, es pecially from Pakistan where leaders of the al-Qaida network are believed to be hiding. But it’s questionable how far the words of Hasballah and Mohammad reverberate from the savaged shores of Aceh and the wasted mountain sides of Pakistan into the wider Mus lim world. Even in communities of the two countries being fed, housed or nursed through American aid, sus picions of Washington’s motives and abhorrence of its policies in Iraq, Palestine and elsewhere persist. “The positive impression the U.S. is trying to make through humani tarian aid may have paid some small dividend, but I wouldn’t over state the ability of these kinds of gestures to counter what is a very strong anti-American current which is directly connected to U.S. policy,” says Jeffrey Winters, a political sci entist at Northwestern University in Evanston, 111. Analysts also note that while Pak istan and Indonesia have nearly 30 percent of the world’s 1.3 billion Mus lims, neither country is at the heart of the Islamic world, and within these two countries both Aceh and Kashmir are out of the national mainstreams. Thus American aid to Aceh, Win ters says, carries a limited amount of payoff since many Indonesians re gard it as a “pariah province” that had fought a war for independence from the central government. Within Aceh, where the tsunami killed more than 130,000 people, even neighbors may differ drastically about the United States. In Teungoh Blang Me, where only 100 of the 700 villagers survived the tsunami, many gratefully remem bered American helicopter crews dispensing sardines, instant noodles and water after they had gone hungry for three days. “We’re thankful to Americans for coming from so far away. We don’t care about American policies as long as they come to help,” said Fauzi Ali, a 49-year-old schoolteacher whose leg and both arms were broken when his house collapsed under the wave. He was certain to lose his infected limbs until a U.S. helicopter whisked him to a hospital and full recovery. The tsunami razed everything but the mosque and killed 80 percent of its 6,500 inhabitants. Revival began after Clinton and Bush, father of the current president, visited in February. Still on a long list of restoration plans is the planting of tamarind and casuarina trees along a street that runs past heaps of debris. Once spruced up, it will feature roadsigns saying “Jalan George Bush dan Bill Clinton.” But in Teungoh Blang Me, a former university student named Almizan denounced the United States while taking a break from laboring to reju venate the village rice paddies — and being paid $3.70 a day by the U.S. government to do it. While the once not infrequent anti-U.S. demonstrations in Aceh have stopped and polls show that since the tsunami Americans are more favorably regarded in Indone sia at large, Madris Mardani of the radical Islamic Defenders Front be lieves the United States is up to no good. He insists it recently pressured the Indonesian government to hike gasoline prices and suspects it’s get ting involved in Aceh — “just like in the governing of Afghanistan” — be cause Aceh is the only Indonesian province that enforces Islamic law. Theft: Fifty percent of thefts aren't reported Continued from page 1 Ellis said. “They’re doing it really fast,” he said. When parking their car, students should remove everything of value, including stereo faceplates and removable speakers, Ellis said. Car owners should also make sure that nothing of value is visible in the car, Ellis said. Ellis recommends having a trust ed friend drive the car during the break so the vehicle is not left in one spot and trying to park in a visible location. Lack of prosecution by the district attorney’s office, increased drug ac tivity and a limited number of po lice officers on patrol contribute to the increase, Ellis said. Students should also report a break-in, no matter how small the theft, Ellis said. Police aren’t likely to catch the thief, but Ellis said 50 percent of thefts are not reported, which makes it difficult for police to track crime. “The best thing we can do is educate the public to make themselves less likely to be a victim,” he said. “We’d rather not have the crime at all. ” Over the Thanksgiving weekend, eight cars where reportedly broken into in the University area that Ellis monitors, he said. University student Elisabeth Foi tle’s 2000 Toyota 4Runner was bro ken into over Thanksgiving break after she left it parked outside her home near East 16th Avenue and Mill Street while visiting her friend’s family in Klamath Falls. The would-be thief broke the dri ver’s door lock but didn’t get into the vehicle. Foitle was a victim of theft earlier this year when some one broke into her car and stole clothing and perfume, she said. John Lesh, a junior at theTJniver sity of Montana, was visiting friends when his car was broken into between midnight and 3 a.m. Thursday. 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