National THE BATTALION THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1981 Page 7 JHOl dli, ner Cowboji rtner Vininj] in, and Lam] ies salesman if selling non loans throng ic University and banks m I Howtonm land, leading: ped from tit, < accounts pn on ad fricndsbifi veloping ae momentE nitiative a: Reagan wins GOP support with choice of O’Connor United Press International ’ WASHINGTON — Presi dent Reagan appealed to a wide range of his constituency — and s won back many disaffected Re publican women — with his choice for the Supreme Court, but he continued to alienate the far right. I The choice of Judge Sandra Day O’Connor to become the first woman on the nation’s highest court was superb polit ics for Reagan. It strengthens his credibility — he pledged early in his pres idential campaign that one of his first appointments to the high court would be a woman. Heagan already has gotten more credit than most of his prede cessors for keeping his cam paign promises. It wins back to his corner thousands of rank-and-file Re publican women who were in near open rebellion over the ministration’s meager record of finding women for top jobs in Washington. 1 At the same time, it takes J ad Navy proposed massive plan to match Soviet naval power of his lira rnibers ofCi ik out about | 1 he had bi he knew bo* lent to bavt plans with i :decessor$ ill agree,"! g about our e had expecsit 1. However,™ United Press International its and poi W ASHINGTON - The Navy, se for inc: iding the high tide of the adminis- ration’s emphasis on defense, has proposed a massive five-year ship- milding and aircraft procurement wram to meet the goal of | IT/"•p natching Soviet naval power by 11 V. I, he end of the decade, Pentagon ifficials say. mse away inn ?'The plan entails building 143 hips, including two more nuc- ? to attract , ear-powered aircraft carriers and a shot at tb 14 additional nuclear attack sub- narines, plus 1,890 planes be- ise Marie, s ween 1982 and 1986 — a 75 per- ecause the i rent increase over what the Carter Ministration proposed, the offi- ket, ’she sail rials said Tuesday, owningak: They said the Navy also plans to we kept tbf‘eactivate four lowaclass bat- leships for use as cruise-missile > have acbaicarriers and two aircraft carriers, $500 in cast he Oriskany and Bon Homme i parish is ofen&hard. 'd to 2,Odder- The proposed buildup, which las been submitted to Defense the giveawn secretary Caspar Weinberger for ?ur. Todispc/ipproval, would cost about $120 of the honifSillion—more than half the entire |>222 billion proposed defense ickets after , budget for fiscal year 1982. Although Weinberger is not ex showing tk Jected to make a formal decision nt to agucstmtil he prepares his fiscal 1983 t because o: budget later this year, he is certain o endorse the Navy program be- •s ago to str ;a use it supports the administra- cause thisis'-j, ptothisFbiggest ever m and ad®; 00 fruit crops sssssssexpected now United Press International WASHINGTON — Record- rnpif setting crops of some popular “ iresh fruits are expected during July — and they are likely to be tion City Hi good food buys. away an argument from Equal Rights Amendment supporters that the ERA is needed because the Reagan administration is no friend of women. But the nomination outraged the easily outraged Moral Ma jority, which vowed to fight the Analysis nomination on the grounds Mrs. O’Connor, while in the Arizona Senate, took stands in dicating support for ERA and abortion. One leader of the antiabor tion movement, theologian Harold O.J. Brown, declared: ‘‘Reagan is absolutely finished with pro-life people, absolute ly. They are so betrayed by this that he will never have one bit of credibility.” In fact, Mrs. O’Connor was not a leader of the pro-ERA forces, nor did she ever advo cate abortion or vote to legalize it. The White House said she told the president she personal ly opposes abortion. In short, Reagan found a modern woman who apparently advocates women’s rights with out feeling a need to crusade on the issue. Reagan also found what he wanted to install on the court — a basically conservative jurist who believes the role of the court is to interpret and imple ment the law, not rewrite or enact it. But the strength of the O’Connor nomination is in the message it sent to women. From the outset of his cam paign, polls consistently showed Reagan to have a favor able rating by a majority of men, but an unfavorable rating by a majority of women. The women’s question was probably Reagan’s greatest poli tical liability. The maledomin- ated world of politics tends to forget there are more women than men in the country. tion’s goal of building a naval force that can match Soviet seapower. In testimony before Congress, Navy officials have said U.S. sea- power has been endangered by in creasing Soviet naval strength, di minishing America’s ability to keep supply lines open to Europe, Asia and the Persian Gulf in the event of war. The buildup would enable the Navy to reach the administration’s objective of 600 ships by 1987, at which time it plans to enlarge the fleet still more with newly de signed vessels that could include light carriers, the officials said. The Navy plans to increase the number of carrier battle groups from 12 to 15. “The theory now is to build on what we have in order to restore the fleet,” said one senior official who requested anonymity. “First, we ll get up to 600 ships” from the 456 now on active duty. “We can’t hold the North Atlan tic and the Mediterranean with one block fe Both California and South Carolina anticipate record peach :rops, say marketing specialists pr the U.S. Department of Agri- :ulture. In addition, the Georgia peach :rop is larger than last year’s. I California also expects record :rops of nectarines and plums and rship with‘Florida a record lime crop. I Other fresh fruits in plentiful [upply for July are oranges and emons. | Beef and pork supplies are ex- gggggggS&ected to be only adequate, Recording to USDA’s monthly Food Marketing Alert, but broil- :r-fryers, turkey, eggs and milk md dairy products will be plenti- ul. So will major canned, noncitrus hiits, including peaches, pears ind fruit cocktail; raisins and dried >runes, rice and dried beans. The USDA defines plentiful as nore than enough for require- nents and adequate as enough to neet normal needs. SAVE BIG BUCKS ALL JULY!! Yairi, Alvarez, Yamaha, All Marked Down FOR A BIQ JULY. LAY-A-WAY!! KcyboARd Center Inc. MANOR EAST MALL Bryan, Texas 77801 MASTER CARD VISA LAYAWAY SPECIAL PURCHASES NOW!! Appearing LIVE ^ Saturday ^ ~ I Night THE Cover *2> m BUNCO RIVER ROTS! Canadians Gobbling’ U.S. energy what we have now,” he said. The Navy would like to double the size of the present fleet to ab out 1,000 ships, including 22 car riers, to establish what officials termed a “prudent risk force” — one able to give the admirals suffi cient power projection to contain the Soviet navy in port. “It would meet the require ments with acceptable risks,” one official said. The proposed fleet expansion goes 80 percent beyond what Jim my Carter’s Pentagon proposed— from 80 to 143 ships — and raises aircraft procurement by 70 per cent — from 1,091 to 1,890 planes, the officials said. It would include 14 new attack submarines instead of seven, bringing the number of the $500 million nuclear boats to 100 by the end of the decade. There also would be nine fri gates, instead of one under the Carter plan, and nine amphibious vessels and six destroyers. United Press International NEW YORK — In what some U.S. oilmen have branded “buc caneering,” Canadians have been gobbling up billions of dollars worth of U.S. energy properties on both sides of the border. Just one day after Congression al legislation was introduced to thwart such moves, Canada De velopment Corp. announced a plan to acquire the Canadian assets ofTexasGulf Inc., the huge American-based energy concern. The same day, Francana Oil and Gas Ltd. of Calgary, Alberta, made a bid for Connecticut-based Amax Inc. ’s 30 percent interest in Adobe Oil and Gas. The previous day, the Mon treal-based Seagram liquor empire bid $2.55 billion for a 41 percent stake in Conoco, the ninth largest U.S. oil company. Con- oco’s chairman said the offer “escalates the continued Cana- dianization of America’s natural resources to a new and more dan gerous level” and filed suit to block the move. Two weeks ear lier, Canada’s Dome Petroleum Ltd. had succeeded in acquiring Conoco’s controlling interest in Hudson’s Bay Oil & Gas Co. of Canada. Meanwhile, Cities Service, the 18th largest U.S. oil company, filed suit against NuWest Ltd. of Canada, which has a 7.2 percent stake in Cities and an eye on Cities’ Canadian unit. The list goes on, and most be lieve the buying spree is far from over. “We ll see much more of this, I’m convinced,” said Dr. Sanford Margoshes, an oil analyst at Bache, Halsey Stuart Shields Inc. The impetus for much of the Canadian buying is Canada’s con troversial seven-month-old Na tional Energy Program. On the one hand, NEP, through its low ceiling on well head prices and higher taxes, has spurred many Canadians to flee south across the border to drill where oil prices are higher and taxes lower. On the other hand, NEP — whose goal it is to make its pet roleum industry 50 percent Cana dian-owned by 1990 — gives firms majority-owned by Canadians huge incentives for exploration and development. Thus Canadian properties are far less valuable in the hands of Americans who are not eligible for the outright grants of 80 cents for every $1 spent on exploration. As a result, embittered U.S. oil companies which haven’t already had their Canadian properties snapped up have been forced to consider selling or entering into some imaginative joint venture with Canadians to be eligible for the same incentives. Some of the larger U.S. firms may wait it out hoping, as one Canadian oil indus try official remarked, that “sanity will eventually prevail” in Cana da’s energy policy. Also banking on the same hopes are large Canadian firms who view this as an opportune time to buy up Canadian oil properties from Americans and other foreigners. “It makes a lot of sense for the longer term since they can buy these assets at depressed current prices,” said analyst Todd Berg man of Goldman, Sachs & Co. Simultaneously, other Cana dians have bought up oil prop erties and drilling rights in Amer ica. Industry figures show 150 drilling rigs have been moved to the United States over the past year. Joe Horler of Canada’s Inde pendent Petroleum Association, says the reason is simple: net re turn on a barrel of oil after taxes, royalties and operating expenses is up to 10 times higher in Amer ica. On June 25, U.S. Reps. Bob Whittaker, R-Kans., and Mike Sy- nar, D-Okla., introduced legisla tion to thwart such takeovers, in cluding a provision which would restrict Canadians from buying more than 5 percent of a U.S. energy firm until the issue can be fully studied. They also introduced a resolu tion urging President Reagan to give the issue highest priority at the U.S.Canadian economic sum mit conference in Ottawa July 2021. Dennis Ivey's Lakeview Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing" Thursday “Nickle Beer Night” Lone Star Draft Beer 5«P a cup! (or $1.00 a pitcher) Music by Dennis Ivey and The Dennis Ivey Band Guys $3.00 Girls $1.00 ‘Saturday Night Houston’s RICK ELLIS and “SILVER” Plus Lone Star Draft Beer $2.00 a Pitcher! 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