Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 29, 1984, edition 1 / Page 2
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2The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, November 29, 1984 " " ' " ""' ' Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for MJiliUriiV sa,e or below the advertised price in each A&P Store, except as 1 !l specifically noted in this ad. V itpSISoSSIIHJ 2AT- DEC-1 AT A4P ,N CHAPEL HILLCARRBORO ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS n) iyj iyj L2J ll vJriy Li kHz U L YOUR LOCAL A & P IN CHAPEL HILLCARRBORO FOR DETAILS T. r Ill K T xl &i with supermarket pncesr I Pork Specials L UN (7 cm i i n r n WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF li Full Cut With Tenderloin V1 WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF i PI fl n mum me lb. o SI 1 IFAIF v Frash With QualitvV . I, S M m ' X H I f M ft fc i A ' r n Y n SWEET F tooife Tamwltas nrrff forr ACLJL. , ir zm EASTERN 11 LJ 3,bf00l bag dJJ it 1 : r PETER PAN 01 11 THE NtMUE PUfS F I I - 'V Jhm. I I nn "is r- .r -2iv A v IB ALL VARIETIES (ml U 10 oz.LqiU p Aap coupon o pOt 0 IN or or Be-. gs iriiijui i i nuiiii h . i . . m inn limn iw I I 0.J LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER. I Kmtid . J GOOD THRU SAT., DEC. 1 AT A&P. 676 oc r ' Aap coupon pnonooDoooc ."" RDj QEfig 1 7..T LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER. Vii ' GOOD THRU SAT., DEC. 1 AT A&P. umI mm& iuHl whimh IteM mmmI sibw mmhI IbAi nnnnnnnrfj 677 m i i AaP COUPON pnonnooLiLiLi m o Tor 3 LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER. GOOD THRU SAT, DEC. 1 AT A&P. on 678 Jl C' qT p) V) AaP COUPON szs I J I. i. .i i wit.y 'f "l '"ll" iV vyr" ""t ' mw.j. .u piuj ,...,iiW,.wr ... ii.m...ii..i.Ai.-,l.,ilil,..IMW..lii..M..uWN J E E n tfiA.T"- USJ!,T TWO WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER. V V Vflig. GOOD THRU SAT., DEC. 1 AT A&P. l if " f ' "wi "Hi f" if p1-'"! ''i ip( f""p f"1 mi n T m 679 2 n CHAPEL HILL 790 AIRPORT RD RAMSHEAD PLAZA 15-501 BY-PASS NCSL fears president's military powers By JIM TOWNSEND Staff Writer The N.C. Student Legislature overwhelmingly approved a resolution Tuesday night opposing U.S. military intervention in Nicaragua without the consent of Congress. By a vote of 1 2 to 2, delegation members passed the measure denouncing "any action by the Reagan adminis tration to militarily intervene in Nicaragua, unless that action is approved by a majority of the members of the House of Representatives and the Senate of the United States of America, or unless Nicaragua takes an offensive action against the United States." Delegation Vice Chairman Steven Epstein said he wrote the resolution in response to the "threats of both governments," adding that U.S. involvement in a war in Nicaragua would be "terrible for America's morale." "The last thing this country needs is another Vietnam," he said. Epstein defended the resolution in a debate preceeding the delegation's vote, saying that by supporting the Contra guerrillas' efforts to topple the Sandinista government the Records ,rom page 1 permanent transcript, he said. The CGC voted against the bill, however. "I think people should go back and write down their records," Berger said. Holley said it would be a bureaucratic hassle to try to re-create the voting records. Working on bills in committee and wrapping up this session of the CGC were more pressing concerns for him, he said. CGC members would be more than willing to convey their records to interested constituents, Holley con tinued. "I don't think any representa tives would lie on where they stood on various issues," he said. Reagan administration was in effect fighting a war in Nicaragua and trying to provoke that country into striking first. "Nicaragua does not pose a threat to the United States," Epstein said. "It is quite likely, though, that the U.S. government would seek to provoke Nicaragua into an attack on El Salvador or Honduras or even a U.S. ship off their coast, much in the same way that we provoked Cambodia. The idea is to make it look like they fired first." College Republicans President Ray Shimer dismissed the idea that the United States was at war in Nicaragua. "We are not at war in Nicaragua," he said, calling the Nicaraguan government another example of a "revolution gone bad." "They get rid of one dictator only to allow another to take over," he added. Ray Jones, a supporter of the resolution, said he voted for it because he was becoming "increasingly disturbed by the thought that the president possesses the power to initiate military action in places like Grenada and Lebanon. He has more power with the military than he is capable of handling." CGC from page 1 funding for an organization?" John Nicholson (Dist. 17) asked. "What's the Scottish population of this campus?" Harris retorted. The measure passed by a 13-8 margin. Only two groups are now constitu tionally funded. The Carolina Union receives 33 percent of student fees, and The Daily Tar Heel gets 1 6 percent. BSM President Sherrod Banks was "satisfied" with the outcome but expressed some dismay at another Soviets aid rebel wounded From Associated Press reports MANAGUA, Nicaragua - One hundred government troops wounded in combat with U.S.-supported guer rillas have been flown to the Soviet Union for medical treatment, a Defense Ministry spokesman said yesterday. The injured, mostly young men wounded fighting rebels in northern Nicaragua, boarded an Aeroflot jetliner Tuesday for the flight to Moscow, Guillermo Gonzalez said. Arms talks begin again MOSCOW The United States and the Soviet Union yesterday resumed talks on controlling the spread of nuclear weapons, the first superpower negotiations on nuclear arms since February. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy, who spoke on condition of anonymity. News In Brief said the talks began yesterday morning at the Soviet Foreign Ministry and will last through Friday. Dole new majority leader WASHINGTON Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas was elected Senate majority leader yesterday when the Republican Caucus picked him by a vote of 28 25 over Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, Stevens' office announced. Dole, who has chaired the Senate Finance Committee, was the party's 1976 vice-presidential nominee and is considered a potential presidential candidate in 1988. question that came up in the debate against the measure dealing with the fiscal responsibility. "The question of BSM's stability, I think, reflects on their inexperience or non-knowledge of the BSM," Banks said. "The BSM has been here since 1969, and to say one mishap with the Black Ink's funding means the BSM is not a stable organization is silly." Banks is referring to last year when the BSM's funds were frozen for having more than the limit of five late requi sitions, all of which were from the Black Ink. IT'S JANUARY AT MILTON'S! SALE PRICES AT THEIR LOWEST SELECTIONS AT THEIR BEST! Camel Hair Sport Coats by Paolo, Reg. $245 $99.90 Jordache Worsted Wool Suits, Vested, Reg. $295 $139.90 Witty Bros. Wool Blend Sport Coats, v Wool Shetland Intarsia Crew Neck Sweaters by Cattivo, Reg. $72.50 $29.90 This is a mere sampling of all the great buy awaiting you on choice exciting clothes. 3 Mlton'ss Clotting Cupboarb 163 E. Franklin St Downtown Chapel Hill also BMOC, exit 145 off I-85 in Burlington Hours: Mon-Sat 10-6:30; Sun 1-5 s 3 SSt-.jVlIliti sf iuMt ) H'-:4 Or REAL PIT BAR B Q 15-501 Bypass at Elliott Rxi. in Chapel Hill 933-9248 FREE DELIVERY l V M " " A CREATIVE TARGETS PRODUCTION 3 AND CBS RECORDS r5 0Q& Tfi : - - - ---- - v -'i DATE: December 5 TIME: 8:00-12:00 PLACE: Great Hall. Union DONATION: $2.00 'i" in1) T ' t VIDEO DANCE PARTY 20 FOOT GIANT SCREEN WMUSIC VIDEOS PRIZES J) FREE POSTERS FREE PEPSI FREE RECORDS STEREO P6PSL I nc uiuilc ur A NGW GENERATION. SOLID GOLD v MUSIC TRIVIA GAME Beer and Wine Permitted: Proof of Age Required Audio-visual equipment courtesy of Sony-Beta PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT THE T.J. MARTELL FOUNDATION FOR LEUKEMIA AND CANCER RESEARCH
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 29, 1984, edition 1
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