local / state Battalion/Page 3 June 8, 1982 >rdeal,r ( ln d patrii l set ays i -a their l lve yet ait to recall rything| -stiontlit 5 the Iasi 'hat littit; er Port St >ther ha: hat anxious it allpos to renw t'er, a than the :k. reforej : minor, on in a Bentsen airs views to local residents by Susan Dittman Battalion Staff Farmers and small business men are receiving the hardest blows during the current reces sion, U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen told a group of local residents at a town meeting Saturday. Bentsen, a Democrat, is seek ing re-election this year against Republican nominee U.S. Rep. Jim Collins. He Fielded ques tions from citizens on subjects ranging from illegal alien poli cies to defense spending. “We are facing an interest rate-induced recession,” Bent sen said. Small businesses, which em ploy over half the people in the United States, cannot aosorb the high interest rates as large businesses can, he said, and as a result, more and more of them are having to close their doors. The situation of the farm eco nomy “is the worst I’ve ever seen it,” Bentsen said. “It’s a point of trying to open up the foreign markets that are limited to us,” he said. In a press conference before the meeting, he suggested that the United States should enter into long-term grain trade agreements with Russia. Bentsen said that when the Senate recently approved a budget package which projected deficits of $117 billion in 1983 and $64 billion in 1985, he chose to vote for the defeated budget proposal which called for a $ 103 billion deficit in 1983 and a ba lanced budget in 1985. He said he sees no solution to the problem of escalating medic- j" al costs although Congressional hearings have been held in attempts to find one. Bentsen said he supports additional aid for the handicap ped because by helping them, they will become more self- supportive, thus saving tax payers’ money in the long run. FflTH€R S DRV GIFT SRl€ Many Items ON€ HALF OFF! featuring clocks, and a variety of prints 9:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 7 through June 11 in the Main Hall of the MSC Sponsored by the MSC Arts Committee i a conci arovide i room f the re!t 1 winf# nt Reagan pledge r 1 • lor arms being to Taiwan blocked United Press International LUBBOCK — A Taiwan gov ernment official said President teagan is a prisoner of his own tale Department and is not leing allowed to carry out cam- laign pledges that guaranteed defensive arms to the island re public, a newspaper reported. Dr. James C.Y. Soong, dire- tor general of the government information office of the Re public of China on Taiwan, also .old Lubbock Avalanche- journal editor Jay Harris in Houston that Vice President |George Bush carried three “most disturbing” letters from the Reagan administration in a recent “detour” to Peking dur ing a Far East visit. “The United States not only violated its own law (the Taiwan Relations Act), but the Reagan administration has given the Communists veto authority over U.S. foreign policy,” Soong said. The Taiwan Relations Act guarantees adequate defensive arms to Taiwan, but in January, the Reagan administration announced it would not sell Taiwan advanced fighter planes. “You have sacrificed your in terests and your allies’ interests,” he said. “You actually haven’t gotten anything in return, ex cept a bunch of anti-Soviet rhe toric. That’s all you got.” Soong, charging that “Mr. Reagan is not being allowed to be Mr. Reagan,” said the presi dent “is a prisoner of certain seg ments of his own State Depart ment, (including) some holdov ers from the Carter administra tion. “This is most regrettable,” he said. “After all, he (Reagan) did pledge during his campaign, and later as president, to uphold the Taiwan Relations Act.” Soong said Bush, in a recent trip to Peking, delivered three letters from the Reagan admi nistration saying the United States appreciated attempts by the Chinese Communists to uni fy Taiwan with the mainland. Peking claims Tai wan is a pro vince of mainland China and has launched a “peaceful reunifica tion” campaign to absorb the is land. Taiwan, which became a bastion for Chinese Nationalists after the Communist takeover in 1949, has rebuffed reunifaction efforts. Soong said these letters left the impression that the Reagan administration felt Peking’s g eace overture was something to e seriously considered. “This amounts to accepting Peking’s ploy,” he said. VBEXXXXXKMJnunKK 0 “The Greatest Name In Do-Nuts Has Moved! 99 DONUT SHOP 4 GRILL Now Open At 210 Villa Maria in Bryan (between Texas Ave. & South College) • Full Menu of Grill Specialties! (Including The Famous Shipley Flame Burgers) Fresh Hot Do-Nuts After 5 P.M.! OPEN 6 A.M.-I I P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK Aggie Owned and Operated! CODEC $ 0U Dillard's annual summer sale of misses' and and suits them?® non ure cit® 1 vn coui ugh fa d in f jnlyc# for o* Who is iere, P®' if you A. tation imo 11 25 to SO % off better dresses ” to 69" Orig. $62-140. Styles by DW3, David Warren, Liz Claiborne, NonStop, 4-14. 49 ft special buy! country dresses 29.99 Comp, at $3644. Selec ted styles in bright colors; flounced, ruffled skirts, 8-16. petites 1- or 2-pc. dresses 34.99 Reg. $46-56. 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