The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 05, 1980, Image 7

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What’s Up
WEDNESDAY
y CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: The Newman Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center.
SOCIOLOGY CLUB: Will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 104 Bolton.
(Jo, SEE: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 203 Harrington.
DEBATE CLUB: Will meet at 8 p.m. in 327 Academic.
TAMU HANG GLIDING CLUB: The meeting scheduled for tonight
will be held Nov. 12 at 8 p.m. in 110 Harrington.
“YANKEE DOODLE DANDY”: This musical biography stars James
Cagney, who sings and dances his way through the life of George M.
Cohen. The feature will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Rudder Theater,
rating i:*HILL COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: Will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the
MSC Lounge.
TAMU SPORT PARACHUTE CLUB: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 209
Harrington.
y I?
, •./ v-* '
ww mu t
SOUTHWEST FILMS: Independent film maker Andy Anderson will
show and discuss two of his films at 7 p.m. in 100 Harrington.
Admission is free.
PRE-VET SOCIETY; Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 321 Physics.
WEST INDIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: Will meet at 6:30
p.m. in 604 AB Rudder.
PANHANDLE HOMETOWN CLUB: Will meet at 7 p.m. at the
Dixie Chicken.
THURSDAY
KAPPA DELTA PI: Will meet at 7 p.m. in 350 MSC.
BOWIE COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: Will meet at 6 p.m. in the
MSC Lounge. Pictures for the Aggieland will be taken at 6:30 p.m.
FRESHMAN AG SOCIETY: Will meet at 7 p.m. in 115 Kleberg.
MSC OUTDOOR RECREATION: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 301
Rudder.
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Will meet for a Bible study
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center and will have a night
prayer service at 10 p.m. at St. Mary's Church.
TAMU MICROCOMPUTER CLUB: Will meet at 7 p.m. in 104B
Zachry.
PRE-THEOLOCICAL SOCIETY: Will meet at 8 p.m. in 211
Academic,
GUATEMALAN STUDENT ORGANIZATION: Will meet at 7:30
p.m. in 137 MSC.
METHODIST STUDENT MOVEMENT: Will meet at 7 p.m. in 141
MSC. ' ' ’ "" ' '
'TEXAS A&M STUDENT Cl
R OF THE AMERICAN
METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY: Will meet at 7 p.m. in the
O&M Building Observatory.
SAVE YOU MONEY!
Lucerne
Party
Dips
V*V SAFEWAY
&& SPECIAL
y** ©
Lucerne
Instant Mix
Hot Chocolate
with Marshmallows
:
Regular
or Sugar Free
Dr Pepper
Plus Deposits
32 Oz.
Scotch Buy Solid
[Margarine —m
.37°
Downy Fabric
Softener
25' OFF LABEL!
Mrs. Wright's Buns | Mrs. Wright's Powdered
^ n“r or il#l ■ fcf* Donuts s
~ s39 c »%.i!W.
SAFEWA Y GUARANTEED ME A TS!
Smok-A-Roma
Sliced Bacon
Manor House
llurkeys
1 Fresh, f
Grade 'A',
10 to 14 Lb.
Weight Range,
Scotch Buy
Paper
Towels
rz
iilLL
Scotch Buyi
Bathroom
Tissue
Grade 'A'
Fresh,Frozen I
Turkey
Hindquarters
or Drumsticks
[Manor House
Ducklings
Grade 'A
Fresh, Frozen
Beef
Short
Ribs
Dry Detergent
Scotch Buy, 49 0z.$| IQ
Phosphate Free Box I • ■ #
Fabric Softener
Scotch
1 Gal.
.. Jug
Detergent
Scotch Buy, 32 Ox-
Clear, Liquid Btl.
S&F BEVERAGE CO.
EL PASO, TEXAS
Bath Soap
Scotch f
Buy v
Paper Napkins
Scotch 140 Ct. f C4
Buy Pkg. a# tj
Paper Plates
Scotch Buy, 100 Ct. ^ "I
9 Inch, White Pkg. law#
wn tliii
r CHINA CUlFjjj
to
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■ 1J, md
Celia
Lambrusco
n Avtuimi
ring
tjece ^
Buckhorn Beer
12 0x. 6 Pack $1 OQ
No Return Btls Ctn. I • W 7
InglenookE!' ], Z>3.99
Liobfraumilch^Z"., ”'“: $ 2.49
In,triM 11'iHilh kM.m,Sin., wHISIf C». cmcMih...
MM
Portions
Single-serving sizes are now available
for the one- or two-person family...
pass up a chancy to enjoy
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* ground beef or pork chops? Now
afeway has done the logical thing
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> SINGLE CHOPS * STEAKS
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» SMALL PAK SEAFOODS
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...IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT!
Whole Top Sirloin jfq
USDA Choice Beef Boneless, LoinLb. 7 #
Whole Loin Strip to # q
USDA Choice Beef Boneless, LoinLb. 0*0#
Tenderloins
USDA Choice Beef Boneless, LoinLb.
Veal Cutlets
or Scallopini, Milk-Fed Veal ... lb.
Lamb Chops mq
Shoulder Cut, Fresh, American .Lb. A • ■ #
Safeway Sausage ti qq
Reg , Beef, Hot or Kielbasa ... lb. I • O O
M 3Q Pnrk Half Hams $9 oq
• w » B WB Im © Smok-A-Roma, Boneless Lb. JmtJmf
$ 7.19 Shoulder Roast ~^r sS ' : ':*2.i9
Lamb Legs to cq , ^ ^ Pork Loin Chops t| eg
Whole, Fresh, American Lb. 3a<e7# Boston Q Assorted, Family Pack Lb. I
*1.89 £ 1 .*1.58
$ 3.49 ib. ■•■'P 1 ^i s „ houlder$,ea ^1.38
Lamb Legs
New Zealand, Whole, Frozen... Lb.
Lamb Chops
Fresh Rib or Loin, American ... Lb.
'Boneless Top
Sirloin
Steak
Ground \
Beef
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pH
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COPYRIGHT I960, SAFEWAY STORES, INC.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THRU WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6-12, 1980 M BRYAN - COLLEGE STATION
QUANTin RIGHTS RESERVED
Safeway and a little bit more
THE BATTALION Page 7
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1980
GTE sets
telephone
charge
By JENIFFER AFFLERBACH
Battalion Staff
As of October 1, dormitory resi
dents must pay $20 to establish long
distance telephone service each
school year, a General Telephone
Company representative told the
Residence Hall Association Tuesday
night.
The cost, which applies each time
service is established or recon
nected, includes a $12 charge for
processing the service order and an
$8 line connection charge.
Students who had long distance
service set up before October 1 will
not be affected by the rate increase
until next September, unless they
change rooms, said Bill Erwin, re
gional manager for GTE in Bryan-
College Station.
If a student changes rooms, he can
save the $8 connection charge if it
has already been paid for the room
he moves into, but he still must pay
the $12 charge, Erwin said.
In other business, RHA delegates
voted 25 to 7 not to endorse a Stu
dent Senate bill which would allow
the MSC Basement to sell beer on
weekends.
A proposal to collect dorm room
keys from students over the Christ
mas break, which raised some con
troversy at the last RHA meeting,
will go into effect the spring semes
ter of 1982 instead of next semester.
This gives dorm residents more
warning of the change, RHA Presi
dent Sherrie Balcar said.
Another issue that raised debate
among delegates was the decision to
require fifth-year seniors and gradu
ate students to live off-campus be
ginning next fall to provide more on-
campus housing for freshmen.
“Freshmen need to be on cam
pus,” said Nolen Mears, RHA Advi
sor. “The people most adapted and
most adjusted to living off-campus
would be the seniors.”
Those opposing the decision said
fifth-year seniors who will be in
school for just one more semester
will have difficulty getting a three-
month lease off-campus.
Couple
kills nude
intruder
United Press International
CLEVELAND — A couple
awakened early Sunday by a nude
intruder say they shdt and killed a
man, who turned out to be a neigh
bor and friend, because he refused to
leave their home.
Curtis D. Pope, 24, died at the
home of Elijah Callahan, 67, and Lil
lian DeVese, 55, Callahan’s com
mon-law wife. Pope, shot six times in
the legs and chest early Sunday,
lived five houses down the street.
The couple said they did not rec
ognize Pope when they shot him.
Ordeal not
all bad: wives
of hostages
United Press International
NEW YORK — The American
hostages in Iran have now seen a year
of captivity, but two of their wives
say they’ve seen some good come of
the confinement.
And the husband of a woman cap
tured in Iran six months after the
hostages were taken says he believes
she will come home with them.
“I think that we, as a nation, have
gained the most extraordinary mass
unity in our history,” said Louisa
Kennedy, the wife of Moorehead
Kennedy, Jr.
Barbara Rosen, the wife of press
attache Barry Rosen, added that the
ordeal has opened a “whole other
world” filled with those who care.
“I feel so proud of the American
people,” she said.
Both women spoke Monday, in a
interview with WHN radio to be
aired Sunday, of their suffering and
their hopes that the hostages will
soon be released.
Tuesday marked the beginning of
the second year of captivity for the
hostages, taken Nov. 4, 1979, in an
attack on the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
Since that day, the relatives of the
52 captives have become “armored, ”
Mrs. Kennedy said.
The families’ incredulous attitude
during the early days of imprison
ment and, later, their see-sawing
hopes for the hostages’ release have
been replaced by a weary and im
placable realism, she said.
“We realized that the news was
worse than the situation itself. We
have become very armored now,”
Mrs. Kennedy added.
Like Mrs. Rosen and Mrs. Ken
nedy, John Dwyer continues to hope
for the release of his spouse.
Dwyer said Monday in Amherst
that he has “never doubted for a mo
ment” that his wife Cynthia—a free
lance journalist — will come home
with the American hostages, despite
State Department statements that
other Americans being held in Iran
will be treated separately.