The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 14, 1980, Image 7

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    ... Plus SPECIALS!
Downy
Fabric
Softener
25< OFF LABEL!
64 Oz. Btl.
MEAT
7:
7
Kitchen Treat
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Frozen
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Regular, 6 Count
Cragmont
Soft
Drinks
Carbonated,
Assorted Variety!
12 Oz.
Cans
White Magic Bleach^,
Detergent X&SiS. S 1.09
Emerald MistLt^
Bathroom Cleaner m,?. I '°.'.;89‘
Glass Cleaner Refill E !I S:49«
Fried Chicken ViM .99
Orange Juice S'"’ ‘£33*
Strawberries S.”.. 3
Glazed Donuts^ , «S.69‘
Mellorine
Peanut Butter^ 3 i;, $ 2.39
Grape Jelly s .“’ d ’ 3, £99*
Salad Dressing ӣ75*
Tomato Catsup Ir. ӣ79*
Mustard
Mrs. Wright'
Pudding
Cake Mix
Scotch Buy
Bathroom
Tissue
69
4-Roll
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Scotch Buy
Paper Towels
„ Our Low
Price!/
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Prepared Jar*t #
( Mrs. Wright's
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if
V '-'il.:' I'/itt.
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Lucerne
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72 Gal. /■rj
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SAFEWAY QUALITY MEATS ... GUARANTEED!
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Theie rtems are available in the following stores only: in Austin at 941 N. Lamar,
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By-th e-piece
AN EXPRESS
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IS OPEN
TIL
MIDNIGHT!
— Quantity Rights Reserved — ® Copyright 1960 - Safeway Stores, Inc.
SAFEWAY
Prices Effective 7 Days: Thursday thru Wednesday, May 15-21, 1980 in Bryan-Coiiage station
and a little bit more!
THE BATTALION Page 7
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14. 1980
Students,
police fight
in Seoul
United Press International
SEOUL, South Korea —
Thousands of rock-throwing stu
dents demanding democratic re
forms and an end to martial law bat
tled riot police in the streets of Seoul
Tuesday in the most serious anti
government protest in recent weeks.
At least 23 students were injured
in the demonstrations, two of them
seriously. About 100 youths were re
ported arrested.
The street clashes involved about
3,000 students from Yonsei Univer
sity, one of the most prestigious pri
vate institutions in South Korea.
The demonstrations began with a
rally to demand the government end
martial law and move faster to imple
ment political reforms.
The protest turned violent when
the Yonsei students broke through a
police line and marched into the
streets of western Seoul. The stu
dents threw rocks at policemen but
helmeted officers forced them back
inside the school grounds with clubs
and tear gas.
The students retreated but re
grouped inside the university and 2
hours later stormed off campus
again, throwing rocks and bricks at
law enforcement officers.
On Monday, student leaders de
cided to keep all protest actions on
campus, following rumors that army
troops may move into schools under
martial law in effect since the Oct. 26
assassination of President Park
Chung-hee.
For the past month, students have
demanded campus reforms, includ
ing resignation of faculty members
who supported Park. But recently
their demands included speedy
democratic reforms and an end to
martial law.
Brezhnev,
Kosygin
in Warsaw
United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet President
Leonid Brezhnev, Premier Alexei
Kosygin and a large group of other
highranking Kremlin officials left
Tuesday for a summit conference of
Warsaw Pact communist leaders in
the Polish capital.
The decision to send both Brezh
nev and Kosygin to Warsaw was un
usual, analysts said. The two top-
ranking Kremlin leaders have not
simultaneously been outside the
country in recent years.
Foreign Minister Andrei Groym-
ko also was in the official party, along
with his fellow Politburo member
Konstantin Chernenko.
Defense Minister Dmitry Usti
nov, 71, who has not been seen in
several weeks, was not a member of
the delegation, nor was his name
listed in the group of oficials who
bade Brezhnev farewell at Vnukovo
airport. His absence reinforced
rumors that he is ill.
Ustinov’s presence normally
would be required at a high-level
meeting of the East bloc military
alliance. The leaders of the Warsaw
Pact nations have not met since
1978.
In Ustinov’s absence, the Soviet
Defense Ministry was represented
by Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov, the first
deputy minister.
The delegation departing for the
Warsaw meetings, which begin
Wednesday, also included Konstan
tin Rusakov, a secretary of the Com
munist Party Central Committee,
the Tass news agency reported.
Once not
enough for
holdup victim
United Press International
DALLAS — Johnnie Johnson fi
gures she has better, less nerve-
racking things to do than pass out
money to masked gunmen.
Johnson, cashier at a self-service
gasoline station, was robbed twice
within four hours Monday.
“I’m pretty scared. I’ll tell you
that,” she said.
First came a man with a gun and a
white rag around his face, forcing his
way into the station about 6 a. m. and
taking more than $6,600 of weekend
income.
Four hours later, while still jittery
over the first holdup, another
masked man approached her station.
She again found herself under the
gun but had only $250 to give the
latecomer, who also stole a candy
bar.