The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 06, 1980, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1980
Page 5
NOTICE *
FOOTBALL FANS
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Sun n Sand Downtown Motor Inn. Buses running ^
:o Stadium. 150 rooms. Doubles $30.00, Singles^
Fighting in Kabul claims more lives
Soviets tighten security around city
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>
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4
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
525. $5.00 each additional person.
SON N SAND DOWNTOWN MOTOR INN
401 N. Lamar
Jackson, Miss. 39205
601-354-2501
United Press International
NEW DELHI, India— Hit and run attacks on Soviet and
Afghan officials coupled with warring between rival factions
of the ruling Communist Party have claimed nearly 100 lives
in the past week in Kabul, reports from the city said Tuesday.
Afghan refugees fleeing the country said fighting in the
besieged capital has escalated in recent weeks.
Diplomats and travelers from the city said Soviet forces
have clamped down on security with tanks and heavily
guarded roadblocks checking all traffic in and out of the city.
“It is only at night you hear it, ” said the father of a family
with several relatives still hoping to leave the country this
month.
“But the machine-gun firing and rockets are worse every
night. Sometimes you hear feet running and you hope ‘My
God, I hope he makes it’ Then you hear the guns.”
The man lived in the Kote Sanghai quarter of Kabul, an
upper middle-class neighborhood near Kabul University. He
said he and his family left all their belongings behind to fool
Afghan and Soviet officers who made spot checks on his
home.
Other Afghan sources, among them travelers from Kabul,
reported the fighting between President Babrak Karmal’s
Parcham faction and the military backed Khalqis had es
calated in the past several weeks.
One traveler said he knew of at least 30 deaths among
Parchamite workers between Friday and Monday, when he
left Kabul.
“If I know of that many in three days among members of
one party, you can be sure there are others,” said the man,
who had Parcham connections.
The sources said they counted nearly 100 fatal attacks on
K mmy mcts * mem! i SAFEWAY
ict.
'kgs.
Bel-air Pizza
Mellorine
Joyett Frozen Dessert. .
Onion Rings
M.19
Fried Chicken
Manor House, frozen
\: $ 2.29
Peanut Butter
Scotch Buy
iS; $ 2.39
1/2 Gal. g (^4
French Fries
Scotch Buy, Regular, Frozen .
2u,7r<F
Bag # JP
Jam or Jelly
Scotch Buy, Grape
32 Oz. ^(^4
7 °x. CT$
. . Pkg. J /
Frozen Dinners
Chtckvn Noodle
Bel-air. ; b~i
Macaroni A Cheese
49*
Preserves
Scotch Buy, Strawberry. . . .
32 S; $ 1.39
Fruit Drinks
Scotch
Buy. . .
46 Oz.
. . Can
Tomato Juice
Town 46 Oz.
House Can
65«
73'
MOTHER’S COOKIES and LUCERNE ICE CREAM
Mother's
•Vanity Cusford Creme,
•Peanut Butter Sandwich, -y ryil|>
•Double Fudge or IUU n
•Party Time CHOICE!
Lucerne, V2 Gal.
Frozen . . . Ctn.
SAFEWAY QUALITY MEATS ... GUARANTEED!
Blueberry
Cheese
Cake
Safeway’s Brand of Thrifty Products!
Scotch Buy
Charcoal Briquets
I Scotch Buy $
'li©
(20 Lb. Bag...to.*2.69) 10 Lb.
Bag
Saltine Crackers
liiSrH 1
T r Scotch
L Buy
Tomatoes uox.OQq
Sweet Peas Oi6 0x.$l
Scotch Buy q) Cans I
Cream Style Corn 160l . ngq
Scotch Buy, Golden Can JLa 0
Cookies
Scotch Buy, Sandwich Pkg
Graham Crackers 160 x
Scotch Buy Pkg
Mocaroni &
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ifs somebody’s/
dinner!
Safeway has long had a reputation
for fine meats. We top this with our
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luscious, juicy rib-eye, T-Bone or sir
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way to your table. And it helps the
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something you can't eat.
At Safeway, it isn’t/us/ meat . . . it’s
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a little bit more
...from Safeway
READY TO SERVE SHOP!
Tfcait itemi or« ayoiloble in fh« following Safeway Storoi only: in Auitin at 9411
N. Lomar, 1500 W. 35th Stroot; in Poarland; Lufkin; Katy; Port Arthur;
Kingwood, in Collogo Station at 1725 Toioa Avo.; League City; Spring; l in
Houston at BelHort at Tolophone Rd., 16550 II Camino Real, Holcombe at Kirby,
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Cypress North Houston ot Huffmeister and in Beaumont at Highway 105.
Eight Pieces of
Fried Chicken or
Whole Smoked
Fryer
$ 3.39
Hot! &
Ready Each
To Eat! Box
French Bread
Hot & 1 Lb.
Delicious! Loaf
Jarlsburg Swiss
Cheese.... u>.
® COPYRIGHT 1960, SAFEWAY STORES, INC.
EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 7-9, 1980 IN BRYAN-COLLEQE STATION
SAFEWAY and a little bit more
party workers and minor officials by armed Moslem rebels in
the past week.
An Afghan courier arriving from Kabul Monday said a
Soviet adviser — believed to be the mastermind behind
Russian intelligence infiltration into Afghan rebel groups —
was gunned down in the capital’s Karet Char suburb last
Tuesday.
The travelers reported automobile drivers had difficulty
purchasing gasoline because of restrictions imposed to halt
fuel purchases for home-made bombs.
Karmal announced further security measures to a group of
Parcham and Khalq party workers he assembles Monday in
the capital, urging them to unify against the rebels, Radio
Kabul reported.
Insurance
forms now
readable
United Press International
AUSTIN — The State Insurance
Board Tuesday gave final approval
to a reduction of 3,556 words from
the policy form used for auto insur
ance in Texas in a effort to make
policies easier for consumers to
understand.
Despite the trimming and sub
stitution of everyday words for
many of the legal terms currently
used in the policy, a test still rates
the new “readable” policy form as
difficult reading material.
The three-member board’s un
animous approval ended S’/a years of
study on the new policy. Board
member Lyndon Olson was out of
town on a business trip but instruct
ed the other board members to cast
an aye vote in his behalf.
“The new form will be more con
cise and easier to read, at least three
times as easy,” board chairman Wil
liam Daves said after final approval
was granted.
The other board member, Dur-
wood Manford, also lauded the new
policy, which reduces the volume of
the standard policy from 9,590 to
6,034 words.
“People have talked a long time
about having a readable policy, and
this approval certainly brings it to
creation,” Manford said.
An insurance company represent
ative who served on the panel that
developed the new policy said the
words themselves are shorter and
far more familiar to the average
person.
“By adopting this policy, the
State Insurance Board will he pro
viding the consumers in Texas with
the opportunity to purchase insur
ance that is more understandable
than any automobile contract they
have ever bought before,” he said.
Tom Baker of Houston, president
of the Independent Insurance
Agents of Texas, said agents sup
ported the new policy.
Seals drops
alien school
injunctions
United Press International
HOUSTON — A federal judge
Tuesday dissolved injunctions
against four school districts ordered
to enroll without charge illegal alien
children, saying the measures dup
licated his order to the state com
missioner of education.
U.S. District Judge Woodrow
Seals vacated his July 21 injunctions
against the Houston, Pasadena,
Spring Branch and Goose Creek
ISD’s “inasmuch as the defendant
independent school districts have
agreed to be bound by the statewide
injunction entered against the com
missioner of education and because
separate injunctions are unneces
sary.”
Attorney General Mark White,
representing the state Education
Commission, last week appealed
Seals’ ruling that will qualify untold
thousands of illegal alien children
for tuition-free public educations
beginning Sept. 1.
The state claims teacher sched
ules, budgets, transportation and
bilingual programs cannot be re
structured in time to comply with
Seals’ order. Seals ruled after hear
ing six weeks of testimony last
spring.
A
Real Tailor
experienced in
^professional re-fashioning^
is saving your clothing &
money (coupon good till Oct.jl
COATS, PANTS, DRESSES,
SKIRTS, MILITARY <*.
> UNIFORMS, JACKETS, ^e®
r ^ BOOT PANTS, .C'ft
FORMALS.
m.
Te :xas
S3 TATE
o
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
216 N. MAIN
BRYAN 822-6105
Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 8 a.m.-1 p.m.