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Show Paul-4 l linrsla. Dminlu r IX. I'MI I lie V'w.upcr "-7 i Ilfi's 5 Will Open Before Christmas Featuring Cantonese Specialties I Located next to ftm Wolfe's in the interior It F of the Holiday Village Mall. IS: 649"5757 WJ aI; Take-out food " a 1 will be available. Grand Opening December 18-24th The Shirt Off My Back 405 Main Street, 6494054 "Finally a store with something more than just "T" shirts and heat transfers. " 3 Stores Nationwide Over 6 years experience in hand silk screening SALE 100 turtle necks.$8.00 a piece. 2 for $14.00. "T" shirts buy 2, get one free. All other styles 15 off. Specializing in logos for bciis. rvstaiiMiits, and team shirts whole sile rJtjrs riix 1 airbrush. 'IXTKH.YVriONAI;. Warsaw, i'olaiul Unionized farm workers added to labor unrest in Poland this week, while elsewhere in Europe NATO leaders contemplated contem-plated possible action they could take in the event ol a Soviet invasion of that country. The Polish Supreme Court is to rule Dec. 30 on whether the farmer's group can be recognized as an independent union. The farmers, part of 4.6 million independent agricultural workers in the country, issued a series of demands: (l)the 1.1 million state farmers , should be allowed to join the union: 2 Uhe government should give equal support to private and public farm operations: and (3)the government should guarantee the right to own property. ; Secretary of State Edmund Muskie proposed a lour-point plan that NATO could carry out in the event of a Russian invasion. It would include the suspension of East-West negotiations, the withdrawal with-drawal of ambassadors, and the halting of cultural exchanges and trade. Bali, Indonesia Saudi Arabia raised its basic oil price to $32 a barrel, putting it in line with the other 12 members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The increase from the Saudis, who supply 8 of all oil consumed in the U.S., will raise gasoline prices 1-1 4 cents a gallon. The increase is retroactive to Nov. 1, which means the Saudis' customers, including Exxon and Mobil, will lose up to $350 million in fourth-quarter profits. The Iraqui-Irani war added an air of tension to the OPEC meeting here, while plans are under way to work out a 1981 pricing agreement. Most countries still favored the $32 benchmark price, bu " talk has?entere around raising the maximum price to be charged for a barrel. Iraq's oil minister said the ceiling price might be raised from $37 to $40. He also said the Iranis 'wanted a price in the $43 to $45 range. " Kampala, Uganda A rare event in African politics occurred here Saturday, as Milton Obote peacefully regained the presidency of Uganda in this week's elections. Obote had been overthrown over-thrown in 1971 by Idi Amin. ' uhv Under , Ugandan Jaw, the party winning 1 a majority of votes in the parliament can name the president,; who will serve a five-year term. Obote's party, the Uganda People's Congress, beat out three other parties to take 66 of the 126 seats. ".. The Democratic Party said the election was corrupted by fraud, gerrymandering, and voter intimidation, and called for another election to be supervised by an independent commission. A commonwealth delegation of observers said they were concerned about the charges, but judged the voting to be fair, Peking Shouting that her accusers were ''renegades and bums," Gang of Four leader Jiang ang was ejected by two bailiffs from the courtroom where she is on trial for her life. The action, ordered by an enraged judge, brought applause from the public gallery. The incident occurred while the court was taking testimony from a' witness named Liao Mosha, who claimed he had been illegally arrested and had his teeth knocked out on Jiang's orders. Liao knew her during her movie starlet days in the 1930s. J iang interrupted, yelling, "Don't you pretend. You took part in the locking up ... " The judge, banging his desk, ordered her to be silent and warned that speaking out of turn was a crime. K "I have the right to defend myself," Mao's widow shouted. 'Irn speaking. So what are you going to do? ';' Her ejection was then ordered. ' Tehran An Iranian official denied reports that a deal haJ been reached which would allow the hostages to return home by Christmas. The Beirut newspaper "As Safir" reported Iran had accepted a proposal to freeze the Shah's wealth, while U.S. courts decided how to dispose of it. However, Behzad Nabari, head of the country's hostage commission, said such a compromise still was unacceptable. In other developments, President Bani-Sadr told "60 Minutes" reporter Mike Wallace that President Carter had lost the incentive to resolve the crisis and was leaving it to President-elect Reagan. Paris Apparently, you are what your mother eats. A French pediatrician reported to a U.N. conference that pregnant women should eat salty foods if they want a boy. -and cheese if they want a girl. The doctor said his studies were the result ol two decades 61 'experiments on reptiles NATIONAL . ". Washington Ronald Reagan filled ten Cabinet posts over the past week with members of his inner circle or veterans of the Richard Nixon Administration Feminist Eleanor Smeal, noting that a preponderance were white males, said Reagan had shown his true colors. Gen. Alexander. Haig was Secretary of State, but his .Watergate history as Nixon's last White House chief of staTf is considered a problem. . ; Reagan named n isper Weinberger as defense secretary; his personal attorney William French Smith as attorney general; his campaign manager William Casey as CIA director; Sen. Richard Schweiker (his proposed running mate in 1976) as secretary of health and human services; ser-vices; financier Donald Regan as Treasury secretary; Rep. David Stockman as budget director; industrialist Malcolm Baldridge as secretary of commerce; GOP official Drew Lewis as transportation secretary; and construction con-struction executive Raymond Donovan as labor secretary. New York At Yoko Ono's request, fans of the slain John Lennon observed a silent 10-minute vigil Sunday at 2 p.m. EST across the country. As 100,000 mourners gathered in Central park, others saluted Lennon in their own way. At Kenosha, Wise, 150 people formed a peace symbol; sym-bol; a radio station in Omaha observed the 10 minutes by playing the prolonged piano chord from the Beatle song "Day in the Life;" and another station in Boston played environmental sounds. It was also reported that two Lertnon fans had committed suicide in grief. Lennon's arrested slayer, Mark David Chapman, Chap-man, changed residences and attorneys. Chapman Chap-man was moved from his second-floor room at Bellevue to the prison on Riker's Island. His lawyer, Herbert Adlerberg, left the case and was replaced by Jonathan Marks. Adlerberg denied reports that he had received death threats. The familiar arguments over gun control flared up in the killing's aftermath. A National Rifle Association (NRA) spokesman announced the group was preparing to counter the "emotional, irrational" reaction to the shooting. Protestors marched outside NRA's Washington office, yelling, "Hey, Hey, NRA, how many did handguns kill today?" Louisville, Kentucky--Col. Harland Sanders, who became not only a millionaire, but a living piece of Americana through his fried chicken recipe, died Tuesday at 90. Governor John Y. Brown, Jr. who bought Kentucky Fried Chicken from Sanders in 1964 announced that the honorary colonel would lie in state in the state ' caDitol at Frankfort,"1 Sanders entered the hospital in early November for kidney and bladder blad-der troubled which developed into pneumonia. Sanders, who learned to cook at age 5, bounced from job to job until 1930, when he opened a motel-restaurant, where he developed his chicken recipe. (The secret 11 herbs and spices . are still secret.) In the 1950s, he began selling the recipe to franchises, and finally achieved nationwide success at age 64. Washington Ronald Reagan's family aroused more interest from the Dress this nast week than his administration-in-transition, as a series of minor tempests blew over (l)wife Nancy's redecorating plans for the White House, (2)son Ron's opinion of President Carter, and (3)the "little gun" Mrs. Reagan. An unidentified aide was quoted as saying the First Lady-to-be wanted the Carters to move into Blair House, the guest quarters across the street, so she could begin redecorating before Jan. 20. Her press secretary Robin Orr told reporters Mrs. Reagan had only suggested she herself might take that step for Reagan's successor. But Orr was dismissed from the staff 24 hours after that statement. President Carter denied reports that he "hit the roof" over the incident and said, "She didn't say that, I think it's distorted." However, reports persisted that Reagan aides were dropping broad hints that the Carters should move early. Ron Reagan, 22 told a "New York Magazine" interviewer he would refuse to shake hands with President Carter at the inauguration because of his name-calling during the campaign. The younger Reagan said Carter had "the morals of a snake." President-elect Reagan said later, "I think we could have done without that." Finally, Nancy Reagan mentioned to an interviewer inter-viewer that she owned "a little gun" for protection, protec-tion, but wouldn't be needing it now with Secret Service protection. She said her husband had shown her how to shoot it. During the discussion, which touched on the John Lennon murder, she said she favors stiff er penalties for criminals who use guns. Washington The Susan B. Anthony dollar has been called the WIN Button of the '80s, but the Treasury Department plans to drum up support for the coin by bronzing it. Treasury officials hope it will then be easier to distinguish from the familiar quarter. But the staff director on a House banking sub-committee said, "Changing the cosmetics won't make it acceptable." More than half of the 800 million Anthony coins minted are in storage. si. luis-"We're tired," explained a student. "We're in finals and the world just doesn't look very good out there." Is that any excuse for 2,000 students and teachers to gather in. a common square and scream for a half hour? Why not? The big scream was organized by sophomore Tuppcr Kinder, who said, "We have to do it to keep healthy.". |