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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1972)
■* • (' BATTALION Wednesday, September 13, 1972 College Station, Texas Page 5 European Governments Act To Put Down Political Terrorism European governments act- "£>' scat '' izeovtrWiii kCm etro ™ m , and i( l !. t f p consiilB WediwdiJ fean monetary fund. Both ms were steps toward unity hew Common Market, for WeslBi^ UnS anC ^ K r<? nades of the n jliiiiibj| Cairo! terrorists at the Munich .Games brought the is- - terrorism to the" front. ! ..|KC rs °f finance and foreign pt '* r fl ^of the 10 governments Unanimously to take a joint stand in the United Nations against terrorists, and tighten co operation among their own se curity forces. The new monetary fund will start operations next year as the forex-unner of an integrated cen tral bank for the 10 countries with a common cui’rency to chal lenge the dominance of the U.S. dollar on world markets. Foreign Minister Maurice Schu mann and Finance Minister Val ery Giscard d’Estaing of France both spoke in the final session of the two-day meeting at the 400- year-old Aldobrandini villa out side Rome. They were reported to have said they saw sufficient progress to hold a scheduled sum mit meeting of the 10 countries in Palis on Oct. 19. President Georges Pompidou of France is due to make the final decision on the summit at a Cab inet meeting on Friday. The ministers also decided to hold another meeting Oct. 20-31 to take joint action against in flation. Both Giscard d’Estaing and West German Finance Minister Helmut Schmidt proposed joint action to curb x*ecent spectacu lar price rises in Western Eu rope. Giscard d’Estaing suggested pex-centage limits be set for price increases. Schmidt says he wants to limit the expansion of ci’edits. But he added that special consid erations would be given to coun- tx-ies with an unemployment prob lem, meaning Britain and Italy. Most governments feel that when they have heavy unemploy ment they must expand credits to get business moving faster. In the beginning the new mon etary fund will serve more as an assertion of European indepen dence than as a possible weapon against monetax-y crises. Its ma jor job is to hold the relative values of European currencies within narrow limits, permitting a fluctuation of no more than 2% per cent. It will do its bookkeeping in the Common Market’? ‘‘unit of account”—equivalent to the U.S. dollar before the devaluation of last December and worth about .fl.OS 1 /^ at the present rate. The fund will be run by the governors of the member coun tries’ central banks under the guidance of the member govern ments. Some of its functions re main to be worked out, including the roles to be played by gold and dollars in its operations. McGovern Campaign In The Red dividu I WASHINGTON — Forty- two labor unions and wealthy in DRUGS & FOODS SPECIALS GOOD WID, THURS, FRI, SAT, SEPT. 13, 14, 15, 14, 1972 BONELESS TOP ROUND SHC U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF 5 « E.' % ■:#C RfMIOT 4 a r USDA CHOICE BEEF NABISCO "COOKIE''BREAK COOKIES SWISS STEAK ssasar—^ 88‘ ENGLISH R0AST --« ="'~ .98' BONELESS STEW ■= 88' BEEF SHORT RIBS =” 45' BOnOM ROUND SWISS “ .«1" BONELESS SMOKED HAM .88' SLICED BACON ““ .85' LONGHORN CHEESE ”^^*7' NABISCO VANILLA WAFERS L„ I CHOCOLATE f kASSORTED 15 oz. PKGS. FOR ST & a if T 12 oz. PKGS FOR ONLY DELICATESSEN-SNACK BAR BABY SWISS CHEESE a. 69' PASTRAMI RUEBEN'S FULLY COOKED - "ITS LEAN" 99^ COOKED CORN BEEF ""r. a,*! 45 swiss cheese rriizr ,i.75' KOSHER SALAMI 80' JANET LEE GRADE AA EGGS TO ASTETTES.3 for *1 00 CHUNK STYLE TUNA = 38' INSTANT TEA »-L„88' A URGE DOZEN r > COLORADO FRESH CORN 4 iiln AMIGO HERIS A GREAT INSTORE i BAKERY TREAT! i BEAN DIR - 33 X Tun tji LARGE WHITE CAKE $ WELL FILLED EARS!!! EACH GRAPES »iwc«oMu»iro>«Y „ 39^ AVOCADOS 2 a 89* YAMS 19* ORANGES. ,.19* NEW CROP ITALIAN PRUNE ^2 ^ BRIGHT t EARLY IMITATION ORANGE JUICE 8-s $ l 00 APPLE PIES NOT FROZEN! M i MADE FRESH P (Q £ IN OUR BAKERY B" SIZE.... dr SKAGGS ALBERTSON S POTATO DINNER „ ROILS 2 49* libbylaNd DINNERS 5 VARIETES TO CHOOSE FROM 9 $ioo 10 01. PKGX DECORATED & CAKES , That TCgSb Pino**! Tg ucH AIL KINDS Wadding Cakes, Btrtfedaf Cakes- Special (Vctriena FLAV-R-PAC CUT CORN 5 ! s :$ l 00 WITH BUTTER CREAM ICING EACH “1. ! Hoy« 4 AM.-* fM. SSMSAY AMs7 PJt* University Dr. at College Ave. DETERGENT AJAX '£99' AJAX LIQUID DETERGENT 32 oz. I als have loaned more than $2 million to 1 Sen. George McGov ern. But the South Dakotan’s presidential campaign is in the red and his fund raisers are far behind those of President Nixon. Heading a list of five labor unions which have loaned or con tributed more than half a million among them is the United Auto Workers. Financial reports filed with the general Accounting Office under a new elections law, showed on Tuesday the UAW loaned Mc- Govem $200,000 through two po litical action committees and con- ■ tributed outright $75,000 more through a third. The Communications Workers and the Machinists each have made loans of $100,000 while the Ctif and Chemical Workers have Contributed $25,000 and the Meat Cutters $12,500. All contributions pr loans have been made through special committees since unions apd businesses are barred by law from giving directly to a candi date. The balance of $1.5 million col lected in McGovern’s loan pro gram has come from wealthy in dividuals including Alabama civil rights lawyer Morris Dees, a Mc Govern finance man who has loaned $190,000 and six others who 1 have made loans of $100,000 or more. The total of $2.00 million in loans is more than one-third of the ,$5 million McGovern has col lected between June 28 and Aug. 31, the end of the reporting pe riod. Latest reports from all candi dates and political committees ex pecting to spend more than $1,000 this year wei*e due Sept. 10. But the GAO is expected to take the rest of the week or more process ing the avalanche .of paper. „ ^ The fm m reported cash on ‘ Viand ’Xiig. M n of $4.1 million. Twenty-three af filiated committees — about half of those expected to report — show combined cash on hand of another $2.5 million. Largest Nixon contributor in the new reports is Walter T. Duncan, a Bryan, Texas, rancher and land developer who has con tributed a $126,000 total to 21 separate committees. The six. largest individual lend ers to McGovern are: General Mdtprs. heir Stewart Mott of New York who loaned McGovern $100,- 000 Oh Aug. 17 to push his total loans and contributions for the yepr near the half million mark; New York real estate man John Tlshmati, $150,000; Cleveland in dustrialist Howard Metzenbaum, $100,000; Baltimore real estate developers Robert and Harry Mey- erhoff, $100,000; Chicago attor ney Howard Weiss, $100,000 and AlVa T. Bonda of Cleveland, $100,- 000. ' TRY~ BATTALION classified iilhie Home Outlet Sai.es and Service AT MVWY. 6 <k 2! OWYAM. TEXAS 77001 Low down payment Local Bank financing Up to 12 years to pay • Free delivery and set up Phone 822-9140 ■: '• . ;; . a. Fe.Ourcs Change Thors For Mrmbersh-p Infer. (ontact ADUl T LIBRARY Cl UR