Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 5, 1980, edition 1 / Page 15
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! I" 1 ' SAT., JANUARYS. 1979 avMwrrnx save 50c fei IB U.8. CHOICE DEEP DIADE CUT SHUCK. EASY8 IB. WD SAVE 20c FEU IB WHOLE 6-8 ICS. AV, 7-BONE CHUCK ROASTS sy Ji ID. WHOU SUCCD PICNICS ia. 79e .' A MA BAM iBHH 11 10-L0. VENT VUE BAG yy vvv f " y 20-LB. VENT CAG $16 VJtFME EARNED THE NAME .... tne ibeei oeoole At Winn-Dixie We Sell Only U.S. Choice Heavy Grain-Fed Mid-Western Beef. Our Beef Is Closer Trimmed Of Excess Bone & Fat Before It Is Weighed & Sold To You! v '.V i BISAND U.S. CHOICE CEEF BONILESS STCW BEEF o CHUCK STEAKS DD f SAVS 36c PER IBs i i -...i nil y :-r- II I '- ,fc II 1 I it" III.. ;$o THIGHS II 1 1 II "Wei US y V V drumsticks t. 9ejJ SAVE 50c FROZEN BEEEPATTIES (12 FOU2-OL SSamiCS) i r l HARVEST FRESH GREEN LB. 4- fife IS' DO SO-CALLED "EVERYDAY LOW PRICES" SAVE YOU ENOUGH? WE DON'T THINK SO! We Have Everyday Low Shelf Prices On Many, Many Items Plus We Offer You The Additional Savings On Early Week "SIZZLERS" & Weekend Special Every Week! That's Why We Urge You To Read Our Ads & Shop Our Specials & You'll Discover What Hundreds Of Thousands Of Winn-Dixie Customers Already Know .... NOBODY SAVES YOU MORS. SAVE 30c PER MARKET SUCED S1AD BACON LB. CSAND U.S. CHOICE CEEF OXTAILS IB. 99c HEAT ft SIEVE SEAFOOD SALII TASTE-O-SEA HUNCH 1MB) e PESCH FILLETS u. $1.39 tHMCH mm piouNon FILLETS n. $1.39 FISHCAKES ib. 69c KONOMV HMND FISH STICKS Sox $1.99 71 IU US. Ci'viV"! conor.i Lauos IB. U 1 (SLICED AT THIS PRICE) BOTTOM ROUND ROASTS u. 11.99 BOTTOM ROUND STEAKS u.$X29 RUMP BOASTS i 11.19 SUNNYIAND EASTERN KD DEUCIOUS o APPLES 39c FLORIDA ' o TANGELOS JS.1 SWEET o POTATOES POPSRITE YELLOW o POPCORN FRESH o MUSHROOMS l 89c CRISP o CARROTS U. 1 YELLOW o ONIONS RAO 98c u. 22c OA BAG 9 I'A7 ao 49c BAO 48c HARVEST FRESH BUNCH RHPORX DLAD5 ROASTS CLADE STEAKS n.99c Arftll" CTAO SUCEDeACONOR U PALMETTO FATJI ixm r.-u::i V a. PALMZTTO FACT! CI1ATIN CAIAD3 V Cw (,;. II II II :-i II ' II II II . C3AKD An mm VB 11 I OCULAR OR CUF it4V; sues C0L06NA 2WOZ. PKO. PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., JAN. 5TH NONE TO DEALERS WE RZSESVE THE RIGHT TO UMITCUANTITIES COPYRIGHT 1980 WtNN-DIXIE RALEIGH, INC. $1.99 EST Sft $119 WttSi "XSt t2.79 V.TT OU THE CARCUNA TIMES -IS The Henanco of Electronic Smog Americans are being bombarded daily with radiation given off by power lines, radio and microwave transmitters, even home appliances, and research indicates it may be extremely hazar dous to their health. Science writer Lowell Ponte writes in the January Reader's Digest: At issue is elec tromagnetic pollu tion ' 'electric smog" the unseen energy waves that spread outward like ripples in a pond around every elec trical device we use. And we use many. The United States is wired with a half a million miles of high voltage power lines. For communications we de pend on 250.000 microwave relay link's... nine million broadcasting transmitters and 'microwave relay sta tions,, and thirty million CB radios flood our air waves." The list goes on, and it is long. The Soviet Union and its Eastern European sat telites have conducted ex tensive research on the ef fects of electric smog. Their findings: "Electromagnetic fields may cause of host of health problems, in cluding hypertension, heart attacks, headaches, sexual dysfunction, drowiness, nervous ex haustion and blood disorder," Ponte writes. Whether they knew of these effects at the time or not, the Soviets for four teen years bombarded the U.S. Embassy in Moscow with radar-like microwaves. Though the practice has since been stopped, former embassy personnel "exhibit a higher rate of cancer than the? American average, and. fVo U.S. am bassadors in Moscow sub jected to this microwave radiation have died of cancer," Ponte continues. Further, medical resear chers at the University of ' Colorado have discovered that the death rate for cer tain cancers, leukemia among them, is higher than average in homes within 130 feet of high current power lines. This may be attributed to the fact that electric smog in terrupts the body's biological rhythms, put ting a greater stress on the body and making it less resistant to disease. The Soviet Union, as a result of its research, has Imposed strict limits o the amount and duratio; of microwave emissions o person may absorb. The U.S., in contrast, has no legal restrictions for elec tromagnetic radiation ex posure, and its formal guidelines are vastly looser than those of the U.S.S.R. (the Soviet criterion is 1000 times tougher for , workers, 10,000 times tougher for civilians). Ponte notes that Representative El.zabeth Holtzman (D., N.Y.) has already asked the White House to consolidate authority over elec tromagnetic radiation. Othet procedures to help protect people from overdose of radiation would include indepen dent, objective research on the problem, legal safe standards for exposure and shielding of high voltage Uncs by putqng thent underground. to It kapor- taattal or two mqbBk It I fc to do tk i Ytti savin Uh m m2aU. Om of th mpu tmtmimk toom tint wm4 to cm daikhMM aodalty to 3703 Ghapch-: 2000 Chapol r;,vnr3600 H.rDuko Sf, -rl 8?1, Hillandale Rd, . ...:,R10 UNrtjtSt houn to Cuka 8oyi far Oem. Tmn slt 8cft M 4UeieB ioadtMa oM tan (Sktiacttro fiavor M toupa, BB4 BfO fTMi B . nttM tad driaetebti aula 9 f fwTtl SaToVTcriaot -"n , , gauaiuvuiH mwmji v mum p 1
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Jan. 5, 1980, edition 1
15
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