The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 03, 1980, Image 7

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    THE BATTALION Page 7
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1980
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ormer radical to surrender?
United Press International
CHICAGO—The Cook County state’s attorney’s office says
has had no recent contact with former Weather Under
ound leader Bernardine Dohrn, despite reports she will end
;# decade of hiding and surrender soon.
Published reports by the Chicago Sun-Times indicated Miss
johm, now 38 — accompanied by William Ayers, 35, a former
gitive and Weathermen leader with whom she has been
ing — was expected to surrender today to Richard Daley’s
ace.
But Chief Deputy State’s Attorney William J. Kunkle Jr.
ould not confirm the report Monday.
Kunkle said Cook County officials were ready and willing to
talk with the former student radical or her representatives, but
they have had no recent contact.
On Nov. 21, Miss Dohm and Ayers, who were living under
assumed names on the upper West Side of Manhattan, paid
three months rent in advance on their apartment and dis
appeared, saying they were going to Chicago.
The couple apparently lived a quiet life during their fugitive
years, raising their two children among the working class.
Ayers worked as a baker and Miss Dohrn as a waitress.
Miss Dohrn reportedly began negotiating a plea-bargain
agreement through New York attorney Michael Kennedy with
the staff of former State’s Attorney Bernard Carey. Daley,
sworn in Monday as Cook County state’s attorney, inherited
those negotiations.
Daley and an assistant met Monday with Kunkle to review
the file on Miss Dohrn and brief the new officials on the
charges against her.
Charges of aggravated battery, solicitation to commit mob
action, resisting arrest and mob action remain outstanding
against Miss Dohrn in connection with the “Days of Rage’’ riots
in October 1969. Although Ayers has been in hiding too, there
have been no charges outstanding against him for six years.
Imported peanuts
may keep peanut
butter on shelves
United Press International
WASHINGTON— To forestall a
potential peanut panic, the Agricul
ture Department is pushing for an
brand sale!
SAFEWAY
Edwards
Coffee
ead
All Grinds
1 Lb. Can
Lucerne
Vi% Low
Fat Milk
tie famous
ide lo pu((!
(J) Brands
to please
ny expen-
vitched lo
ds as the
and other
Pearl
Light Beer
Beer & Wine Available at Safeway Stores With
S & F Beverage Co. Concessions Onlyl
Coca Cola,
Sprite, Sugar
Free Sprite
or Tab
PER CHINA CERTIFICATE
ON OUR SPECIAL CLUB/
LAY A WAY PLAN WITH
EVERY *3.00 FOOD PURCHASE.
HERE'S THE PLAN: — It's so easy to own this lovely china.
Start it today — simply purchase your CHINA CLUB/LAY-A-
WAY Certificates for only 99‘ with each and every *3.00 pur
chase. When you have collected 40 certificates, redeem the
completed brochure for the set of your choice. This com
plete set costs you only *39.60 on our CLUB/LAY-A-WAY plan
— a fabulous savings as compared to department store
pricesl Complete as many certificates saver brochures as
you want — service for 8, service for 12, and so on. Start
saving your certificates today!
Salad Dressing
NvMade 1,000 16 Oz.
Island, SPECIAL! Btl.
Mushrooms Stems & Pieces
89
Tomato Catsup
Town
House.
Dill Pickles
1
Corn Flakes
”s89 !
Safeway Cereal,
SPECIAL!
12 or.
. . . Box
“i99' t
Crispy Rice
Safeway
Cereal
10 Oz.
.. . Box
S&F BEVERAGE CO.
EL PASO. TEXAS
Buckhorn Beer
12 Oz. No Return Bottles
Celia Lambrusco WinesBtL $ 2.89
Liebfraumilch S«'. 23 5 B 0 ti $ 4.39
Beer l wine available at Safeway Stores With S t F Beverage Co. concessions.
SAFEWAY QUALITY MEATS... THEY’RE GUARANTEED!
Available at Safeway Stores with
Bakeries or Combination
Delicatessen and Bake Shops Only!
8 Pieces Fried
Chicken or Whole
Smoked Fryers
Your
Choire
Whole
Smoked
Picnics
French Bread
Hot and
Delicious!
Jarlsburg
Cheese |
6-8 Lb.
Weight Range • . Lb.
Boneless
Top Sirloin
Steak
SAFEWAY
QUALITY
MEATS!
USDA
Choice Beef
. l ® i P.... Lb.
Sliced Bacon
UfL«kl«v »« - Smok-A-Romn Bontlen.
vvnoie namS Water Added, Fvllr Cooked
Smoked Sausage
Pork Loin Chops “ptk
11k.
• Pkg.
Safeway Regular,
Hat, Beef or Kielbasa
’t.69 Boneless Top
u*2.i9 Whole Sirloini
u*1.89 USDA Choice
*.*1.58 B . e ? f : u . in .
Lb.
2 ^.^ Whole Loin Strips #q
jF^h USDA Choice Beef, Boneless Loins. . . Lb. WaOw
Whole Tenderloins t , $ 4.39
Lamb Legs
ib $ 2.59
Compliments
Any Meal!
Ground Beef
Pattie Mix
75% Beef, 25% Hydrated
Vegetable Protein
Safeway
Burritos
Assorted
Varieties
Sliced
Beef
Liver
Fresh,
Frozen
e COPYRIGHT 1960, SAFEWAY STORES, INC.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THRU WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4-10,1980 in hryan - colleqe station
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
SAFEW AY and a little bit more
increase in peanut imports to keep
peanut butter on grocery shelves.
The move is needed because the
peanut crop, hurt more by this sum
mer’s drought than any other crop,
was so small peanut prices are sky
rocketing.
The Agriculture Department has
recommended President Carter take
immediate temporary action to raise
imports by 200 million pounds of edi
ble peanuts. Officials say realistically
they believe only 110 million pounds
will be imported.
Farm prices are expected to be 45
percent higher than last year and
wholesale prices for edible peanuts
could rise 50 to 60 percent, the de
partment said.
The potential shortage is so se
vere, industry experts said, peanuts
or peanut butter could vanish from
store shelves in six months unless
additional peanuts are imported.
Francis Taliaferro, owner of two
Virginia peanut shops, said his Suf
folk, Va., supplier told him three
weeks ago he would take no new
orders.
“There are few words to describe
it. There are just no nuts. We’ve nev
er, ever, had a problem like this,”
said Taliaferro, who has been in the
business 40 years.
Howard Hjort, the department’s
chief economist, Monday told the
U.S. International Trade Commis
sion Carter should act immediately
under special authority even before
the panel makes an official recom
mendation.
Hjort said increased imports
would “moderate domestic price in
creases.”
Usually, government policy mak
ers must shape policies to deal with
excess peanut supplies. Since 1953,
peanut imports have been limited to
1.7 million pounds a year.
But this year’s crop, the smallest
since 1964, changed the picture so
that imports could ease a problem of
short supply. The crop was 42 per
cent smaller than last year and the
quality was so poor edible peanuts
are in shorter supply than peanuts
used for seed or crushed for oil.
Last season the United States pro
vided about half of peanuts that went
into yvorld trade. This season U.S.
peanut exports are expected to drop
to 420 million pounds compared to
800 million pounds last year.
“If these two countries decide to
export greater-than-usual amounts
— particularly of edible grade
peanuts — there could be some eas
ing in the pressure on limited U.S.
supplies,” Hjort said.
Hjort said the import restrictions
on peanuts should be relaxed for only
a temporary period ending June 30,
so it would not interfere with the
government’s price support program
for next year’s crop.
Next edition
full of great
new quotes
United Press International
NEW YORK — Most bookish
people know William Shakespeare is
credited with the line, “To be or not
to be.”
Some even know Samuel Johnson
said, “I am willing to love all man
kind, except an American.”
But who said, “If my film makes
one more person feel miserable I’ll
feel I’ve done my job. ”?
If you guessed the skinnier of the
comedians Allen, then you were
right.
The latest edition of Bartlett’s
Familiar Quotations published by
Little, Brown has been updated with
more than 450 quotations from mod
ern songwriters, hipsters, activists,
politicians and movie stars — many
of which seem inane and some of
which seem absolutely prescient. All
are fun.
Some old and new examples with
which to test your quotation con
sciousness:
1. “I have been poor and I have
been rich. Rich is better.”
2. “The game isn’t over till it’s
over.”
3. “I must get out of these wet
clothes and into a dry martini.”
4. “Always do right. This will gra
tify some people and astonish the
rest.”
5. “Into each life some rain must
fan.”
6. “Violence is necessary; it is as
American as cherry pie.”
7. “When the president does it,
that means it is not illegal.”
8. “Keep on truckin.”’
9. “Turn on, tune in, drop out.”
10. “Play it again, Sam.”
The answers: 1-Sophie Tucker; 2-
Yogi Berra; 3-Robert Benchley; 4-
Mark Twain; 5-Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow; 6-Rap (Hubert Ceroid)
Brown; 7-Richard Nixon; 8-
Cartoonist Robert Crumb; 9-
Timothy Leary; 10-Not Humphrey
Bogart. All Bogie said in the film
“Casablanca” was “Play it” and all
Ingrid Bergman said was “Play it,
Sam . ” Yes, it was Woody Allen who
said “Play it again, Sam. ”