Pag National THE BATTALION Page 5 TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1981 c li Offshore oil upted for •ouple, 1 be mi Watt limits leasing plan ents was ir mattri ne hotgun, United Press International WASHINGTON — Interior Secretary James Watt is expected to cut back drastically his controversial plan to put almost all federal coastal waters up for oil and gas leasing in the next five years, a ipokesman said Monday. The Interior Department spokesman said Watt probably will inderwe*.' announce a scaled down leasing plan sometime this week, backing ’ir pants; away from his original proposal to offer 200 million offshore acres annually for oil and gas exploration. air, reside Watt drew heavy criticism from the oil industry as well as conserva- olebratitu tionists, state governments and federal officials for his five-year prop osal to offer practically the entire federal outer- continental shelf for ost town; lease. The spokesman said the revised plan probably means the agency will “just offer the industry whatever seems to have the best pros- ■bects.” 1 “It would be a lot more than what would have been offered under • the (Carter administration) program, but it’s still a lot less than 200 1 pMon acres a year,” he said. Another possible alternative, he said, would be to offer 200 million acres a year and let the companies select what they want to bid on. But Ipe said the second proposal was less likely to be adopted by Watt. lOvisiton) Since the first federal offshore oil and gas leases were offered in fewer ti; only 42.8 million acres have been leased. Only about 22 million p. acres are now under lease to oil and gas exploration and production appeared fP rms - untry n® When Cecil Andrus was running the Interior Department under ng andr (resident Carter, the oil industry complained bitterly about a lockup of public resources and government’s alleged refusal to offer the most ■attractive leasing areas. But Watt’s spokesman gave much of the credit to objections from some oil companies for the decision to rework the secretary’s plan . o plagu y music! ’s in Pi DuPont, Conoco sign agreement y was toL htclub’s !arby grounds I ,'d of 10,1 • congests e traffic Cfl ally agree; o the raH United Press International fighting J WILMINGTON, Del. — DuPont Co. said Monday it has signed an on the i|ag reernent with Conoco Inc. under which it could acquire all the stock lay affair gi ant oil and coal combine for a total of $7.3 billion in stock and showed : ^b- 500 pecf DuPont said it would make an immediate offer of $87.50 a share for seavy rai ^ percent of Conoco’s outstanding stock. H'cccl thef ^bis tops the $73-a-share offer for Conoco of Joseph E. Seagram & forthefinc Sons, the U.S. subsidiary of Seagram Ltd. of Montreal, which Conoco ;as resid ^ as been fiercely resisting. munitvstfc Seagram has sued Conoco charging it with extensive violations of ,> U.S. securities laws and flagrant dereliction to stockholders. •omingut but U.S. District Judge Edward Weinfeld in New York denied nilw iy Fe Seagram’s motion for a temporary restraining order which sought to ‘ t|i ( r , bar Conoco from taking certain steps, including a threatened liquida- t nin tion of the company, to bar the Seagram bid. v t() a In addition to the cash offer, DuPont Chairman Edward G. Jefferson said Dupont will offer 1.6 shares of its common stock for each remain- i ing share of Conoco. But the agreement gives DuPont the option of 15.9 million unissued Conoco shares for $87.50 a share. The stock swap k's abow P <,rt ' on °f the deal is expected to be tax-free. Conoco has a total of 86 k l( \ t p, million shares outstanding. , | i Jefferson said Conoco would continue to operate completely auton- . S i! omously. Although DuPont is the acquiring company, it is not quite as \ large as Conoco, which had $18.3 billion in revenues last year against I $13.7 billion for DuPont. ' >d At Hi! Conoco is the ninth largest U.S. oil company and the nation’s second " ( , ( | largest coal company. DuPont is one of the world’s largest chemical 1X1 ‘ u ^ ; companies. i v rt! Tbe Seagram offer amounted to $2.5 billion for 35 million shares or 1 I* |, about 41 percent of Conoco. 11 ( / A special meeting of DuPont shareholders will be called in mid- August to vote on the deal. DuPont will have to borrow $3 billion to ‘y , , (I complete the deal. Conoco stockholders also must vote on the deal. , scnec u Tj ie j r meeting will be held after regulatory approval and other formali- for a t j es hgj-g Been ironed out. rks display!; , Congress faced with fast approaching deadline United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan is put ting the pressure on Congress to produce an acceptable tax cut bill before the month-long con gressional recess scheduled to begin Aug. 3. With Congress due to return Wednesday from its extended Fourth of July holiday, both houses will have less than four weeks to pass separate bills and reconcile their differences before send ing a tax package to the White House. The Senate, with its Republican majority, should have little trouble. The Senate Finance Committee has com pleted action on the administration’s tax proposal, including the president’s 25 percent across-the- board tax cut for individuals, spread over 33 months. Chairman Bob Dole, R-Kan., expects to bring the bill to the Senate floor around July 15 for reasonably prompt approval. The rub, however, will come in the House. House Democrats, working on their own tax cut alternative, planned to get down to business this week in the Ways and Means Committee, where they hold a commanding 23-12 edge. The Democratic alternative — which would cut tax rates by an average 15 percent over 21 months — is assured approval by the panel. The Democrats target their cuts more toward taxpayers in the $15,000 to $50,000 income range by boosting the standard deduction and increas ing the earned income credit for the working poor. A committee staff member indicated the panel would need about two weeks to complete work on the tax bill. So far, it has approved a package of business tax cuts and savings incentives. Although a giant conference committee still has to put together a final budget cut bill, the House and Senate measures are similiar. Both reduce spending in fiscal 1982 by about $38 billion. The bills also would cut spending in the 1983 and 1984 fiscal years, although not enough to balance the budget in 1984 as Reagan wanted. A major difference is the approach the two bodies take to cutting about $1 billion in Medicaid funds. The Senate took a more rigid approach, placing a legal limit on the amount the federal government could contribute to Medicaid. The House rejected the idea of a legal cap although it reduced funds almost as much as the Senate. The House method would allow funds to be increased if necessary. Both bills tighten food stamp eligibility, cut ting about $1.8 billion; accept a watered-down version of Reagan’s block grant proposals; reduce education funds, including college student loans; and cut school lunch funds, housing programs and a variety of domestic social services. And the Senate resumes action on the Justice Department authorization bill, still stymied by a filibuster against a sweeping anti-busing amend ment. There are indications that more and more liberal senators are ready to join Sen. Lowell Weicker’s one-man filibuster against an amend ment that would bar the Justice Department from ordering busing beyond the school nearest a stu dent’s home and forbid the court from creating plans that take students by bus more than 10 miles or 30 minutes. NY bridge Cables sag, bridge closes United Press International NEW YORK — The old nursery rhyme about London Bridge falling down perhaps should also include the Brooklyn Bridge. For the second time in a week, the 98-year-old span had to be closed because of trouble with one of its suspension cables. Police shut down the span Sunday for two hours because one of the cables involved in the incident a week ago sagged and authorities thought it would snap. In the earlier incident, a man on the pedestrian walkway of the span was injured when he was struck by the cable that snapped, prompting authorities to close the bridge for vehicular traffic for several hours. The walkway has remained closed. The snapped cable also struck several other similar lines when it fell. One of those lines was involved in the incident Sunday, author ities said. They said the cable snapped because it was corroded with age. The diagonally-hung line, one of hundreds on the span, was originally intended to stabilize the bridge in crosswinds. The bridge, which connects lower Manhattan with Brooklyn Heights, was opened in 1883. It is 1,597 feet long. MfttN PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Are you considering abortion? 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