WEST HAWAII TODAY | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015 - page 3

WAIKOLOA VILLAGE MARKET
Waikoloa Highlands Center | 68-3916 Paniolo Ave., Waikoloa Village, HI 96738 | (808)883-1088 | 6am-9pm |
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Bounty
Paper Towels
1 Regular Roll
Angel Soft
Bath Tissues
12 Double Rolls
Malama Eco
Products Paper
Plates
36 count
Dawn Ultra
Dish Liquid
9 oz., Concentrated
Glade Air
Fresheners
Spray 8 oz. or
Cones 6 oz.
Organix Hair Care
Spray, Oil, Shampoo,
Conditioner or Serum
3.3 to 13 oz.
Adventure Hawaii
Action Flask
1 ct., 21 oz. capacity
Insulated!
Emergen-C
Drink Mix
24 to 30 ct.,
Vitamin C or Emergen-Zzzz
Dietary Supplement
Scotch-Brite
Scrub Sponge
1 ct.
Delicate Care, Heavy
Duty or Non-Scratch
Duracell Coppertop
Alkaline Batteries
AAA, AA 8 ct., C,
D 4 ct. or 9V 2 ct.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
Natural Fruit or Tea
Hawaiian Sun
Drinks
6 cans, 11.5 oz.
Mountain Apple Brand Vacuum Packed
Tossed
Salad
Mix
12 oz.
Star Olive
Oil
16.9 oz.
Orig. Pure, Extra
Virgin or Light
1916 Mid-Joint Sections
Chicken
Wings
2.5 lbs., Frozen
On a brioche bun with chips!
Hot Pastrami
Sandwich
Deli special!
Or Chilled Airflown
Salmon Steak
Warnock White Triangle Tortilla Chips
Rancho
Berenda
14 oz.
Quality Guaranteed
Bosc
Pears
Crisp & juicy!
Organic Valley
Milk
64 oz., Whole,
Fat Free, Lowfat 1%
or Reduced Fat 2%
USDA Grain Fed Beef
New York
Steak
Family Pack
Tomato
Heinz
Ketchup
14 oz. squeeze
Bakery Vanilla
Mini Cream Rolls
8.5 oz., 12 ct., European Style
Sandwich maker!
Roman Meal
Bread
24 oz. loaf
Pepsi Soda
12 cans
Also Crush, Lipton Iced Tea,
Mtn Dew, Mug, Sierra Mist,
Squirt or Schweppes
Hershey's Candy
9.4 to 15 oz. Classic Bag, Hugs,
Kisses, Nuggets, Kit Kat, Reese's,
Rolo, Mounds, Almond Joy, Heath, York or Asst.
99
¢
$
2
29
$
1
99
$
5
29
$
3
89
$
2
19
$
7
19
$
4
59
$
1
39
$
9
69
Hawaiian Sun Powder
Drink Mix
3.23 to 4.97 oz......
Kabocha Pumpkin
Island Fresh ...........................
Cara Mia Artichoke
Hearts
14.75 oz.
In Water or Marinated......
Flav
R
Pac Steam of
the Crop Vegetables
12 oz., Frozen Selected.............
Hickory Country
Bacon
16 oz.........................
Newman's Own
Microwave Popcorn
3 ct. ...
Ewa Sweet Corn
4 ears, Island Fresh .................
Coral Chunk Light
Tuna
5 oz., In Oil or Water
Deli President Brie
7 oz., Soft Ripened Cheese .....
Brioche Hamburger
Rolls
4 ct., 4 oz. Bakery buy!.....
Sapporo Ichiban
Ramen
3.5 to 3.55 oz.......
Taco Bell Refried Beans
16 oz., Original or Fat Free ................
Diamond G Calrose
Rice
15 lbs., White or Brown ........
Prices Good
Oct. 7 to 13,
2015
ea.
ea.
$
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99
$
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49
$
3
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Foster Farms Chicken
Thighs
Boneless Skinless Value Pack....
Center Cut Pork Chops
Chilled Boneless Family
Pack or Whole Spare Ribs.........
serving
suggestion
serving
suggestion
serving
suggestion
$
4
99
USDA Grain Fed Round Tip Boneless Beef
Teriyaki
Steak
Family Pack
lb.
lb.
lb.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
ea.
serving
suggestion
serving
suggestion
serving
suggestion
lb.
lb.
ea.
lb.
2
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5
$
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2
$
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$
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97
Guinness
Beer
6 bottles
Blonde American,
Draught or Stout
ea.
$
14
47
ea.
Kona Brewing
Co. Beer
12 bottles
or cans
$
11
69
ea.
Steinlager
or Pacifico
Clara Beer
12 bottles
Enter to win a
TRIP FOR 2 TO LAS VEGAS
FOR THE RUGBY WORLD SERIES!
No purchase necessary. See stores for details.
$
10
59
ea.
Budweiser, Coors
12 bottles, cans or
Miller Beer
12 cans
Chateau St. Jean
or William Hill
Wine Values!
750 ml.
Durango Tequila
or Evan Williams
Bourbon Whiskey
750 ml.
Chateau Ste. Michelle
Indian Wells or Kim
Crawford Sauvignon
Blanc Wines
750 ml.
Skyy Vodka or
Jose Cuervo
Tequila
750 ml.
Franzia
5 liters
or Naked Grape
Box Wines
3 liters
Crown Royal
Canadian Whisky
or Absolut Vodka
750 ml.
4
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5
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$
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serving
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3A
WEST HAWAII TODAY | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015
US cargo ship with 33
aboard sank during
hurricane
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The
captain of the 790-foot El Faro
planned to bypass Hurricane
Joaquin, but some kind of
mechanical failure left the U.S.
container ship with 33 people
aboard helplessly — and tragi-
cally — adrift in the path of the
powerful storm, the vessel’s own-
ers say.
On Monday, four days after
the ship vanished, the Coast
Guard concluded it sank near the
Bahamas in about 15,000 feet of
water. One unidentified body in a
survival suit was recovered, and
the search went on for any trace
of the other crew members.
Survival suits help mariners
float and stay warm. But even
with the water temperature at 85
degrees, hypothermia can set in
quickly, Coast Guard Capt. Mark
Fedor said. He noted that the hur-
ricane had winds of about 140
mph and waves topping 50 feet.
The ship, carrying cars and
other products, had 28 crew
members from the U.S. and five
from Poland.
United States and 11 other
Pacific Rim countries
reach a sweeping and
controversial trade deal
WASHINGTON — Having ham-
mered out an ambitious trade
deal with 11 Pacific Rim coun-
tries, the Obama administration
now faces a potentially tougher
task: selling the deal to a skepti-
cal Congress.
The countries reached a con-
tentious trade pact Monday that
cuts trade barriers, sets labor and
environmental standards and
protects multinational corpora-
tions’ intellectual property after
marathon negotiating sessions in
Atlanta through the weekend.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership
is designed to encourage trade
between the United States,
Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile,
Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New
Zealand, Peru, Singapore and
Vietnam. Together, the countries
account for 40 percent of world
economic output.
For President Barack Obama,
the trade deal is a major victory
on a centerpiece of his interna-
tional agenda.
Netanyahu vows
‘strong hand’ against
Palestinians throwing
stones, firebombs
JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
warned Monday that he will use
a “strong hand” to quell violent
Palestinian protests and deadly
attacks, signaling that the cur-
rent round of violence is bound to
escalate at a time when a political
solution to the conflict is increas-
ingly distant.
Netanyahu said he has sent
thousands more soldiers and
police to the West Bank and Arab
neighborhoods of Jerusalem and
that“we are allowing our forces to
take strong action against those
who throw rocks and firebombs.”
He said restrictions limiting what
security forces can do were being
lifted, but did not elaborate.
Netanyahu’s warnings came
after a rash of violence that
beganThursday when Palestinian
gunmen killed an Israeli couple
in their car near a settlement
in the West Bank as their four
children watched. Two days
later, a Palestinian stabbed an
Israeli man to death and seri-
ously wounded his wife as they
walked in Jerusalem’s Old City,
then attacked and killed another
Israeli man.
Israeli forces, meanwhile, killed
two suspected Palestinian assail-
ants over the weekend and on
Monday shot dead two teenage
stone-throwers, one of them a
13-year-old boy, in West Bank
clashes.
In all, eight Palestinians were
wounded by live fire and 45 by
rubber-coated steel pellets in
the West Bank and Jerusalem on
Monday, the Red Crescent said.
By wire sources
in brief
US commander says Afghans
requested US airstrike in Kunduz
WASHINGTON — Afghan
forces who reported being
under Taliban fire requested
the U.S. airstrike that killed 22
people at a medical clinic in
northern Afghanistan over the
weekend, the top commander
of American and coalition forc-
es in Afghanistan said Monday,
correcting an initial U.S. state-
ment that the strike had been
launched because U.S. forces
were threatened.
The strike wasn’t sought
by U.S. forces, Gen. John
F. Campbell said at a hast-
ily arranged Pentagon news
conference.
“We have now learned that on
Oct. 3, Afghan forces advised
that they were taking fire from
enemy positions and asked for
air support from U.S. forces,”
Campbell said. “An airstrike
was then called to eliminate the
Taliban threat and several civil-
ians were accidentally struck.
This is different from the ini-
tial reports, which indicated
that U.S. forces were threat-
ened and that the airstrike was
called on their behalf.”
The clinic was operated by
the medical charity Doctors
Without Borders. The attack
killed at least 22 people and
wounded dozens more, setting
the hospital on fire.
In response to Campbell’s
remarks, the organization’s
general director, Christopher
Stokes, said the U.S. had admit-
ted that it attacked the facility.
“The U.S. military remains
responsible for the targets it
hits, even though it is part of a
coalition,” Stokes said. “There
can be no justification for this
horrible attack. With such
constant discrepancies in the
U.S. and Afghan accounts of
what happened, the need for
a full transparent indepen-
dent investigation is ever more
critical.”
On Saturday, Afghan officials
said Taliban fighters were in
the hospital at the time of the
airstrike, but that is in dispute.
On Sunday, NATO, under
whose umbrella the U.S.-
led coalition operates in
Afghanistan, issued a state-
ment saying U.S. forces had
conducted an airstrike against
“insurgents who were direct-
ly firing upon U.S. service
members” who were advising
Afghan forces in Kunduz. The
statement also said NATO was
undertaking a preliminary
assessment of the incident
by a multi-national “casualty
assessment team,” and that it
would produce initial results
“in a matter of days.”
The U.S. military is doing
its own standard investigation
under the Uniform Code of
Military Justice.
Campbell’s revised account
does not clarify whether the
clinic was targeted in error or
whether U.S. military personnel
followed procedure. They are
required to verify that the target
of the requested airstrike is valid
before firing. Asked about those
procedures, Campbell said he
would not discuss the rules of
engagement under which U.S.
forces operate.
Asked whether he could con-
firm in general terms wheth-
er hospitals and other civil-
ian facilities like mosques and
schools are off limits to U.S.
airstrikes, Campbell replied,
“Very broadly, we do not
strike those kind of targets,
absolutely.”
He declined to say who
authorized the strike. He said
it was carried out by an AC-130
gunship, which is an Air Force
special operations aircraft
sometimes used against close-
range ground targets. The air-
craft is armed with side-firing
weapons including 40mm and
105mm cannons and a 25mm
Gatling gun.
BY ROBERT BURNS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Doctors Without Borders hospital is seen in flames,
after explosions in the northern Afghan city of Kunduz,
Saturday. Medecins Sans Frontieres/The Associated Press
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