TALION idis 'age? led in the y editor, I ;ive as to irig to say, however, somewhat lays later, f The Batt xiously I ?em. After he football I found it. Commons 'y> the ex- my face ppiness to to anger, tory. That story with ing like a plated my writer, t? They iss me if 1 irough my bone num- ■ man who le my best alion, Nick 1 I were in The Batt. oung and de too had t his high b too real- . was much his high too saw his on a story not write, ame over, ton and I Ne bitched our Battal- i couple of dden Foot- m the dis- ;ading The rning, and disgust I an entire hat after- o call The the sports oy mind... Harrison, rts editors, phone, I hting into Ryan into ut I didn’t. :nt caught I merely my story, dy, I made ork on be- vriter, the Wednesday • December 7, 1994 "THE Tl ATT ALION Page 9 Royal oil found beneath ^Windsor castle LONDON (AP) — The royal soap opera threatens to take the full “Dallas” route as Queen Elizabeth II goes drilling for oil beneath Windsor Castle. In this week’s exciting episode: Will Charles divorce Di? Whose book is selling bet ter? And has anyone got a home for Fergie? News of a possible royal gusher came Tuesday, punctu ating a week that began with opposition politicians calling for a less flashy monarchy, and which could end with an an nouncement of a divorce. A Canadian entrepreneur says seismic studies indicate the likelihood of a small oil field 1,000 feet beneath Wind sor Castle, the queen’s week end home 20 miles west of the capital. The queen has given Canuk Exploration Ltd. per mission to sink a well in her garden to test reserves. “In any other location, it would have been tested years ago. But nobody previously has had the courage,” said Desmond Oswald, Canuk’s managing director. Oswald has estimated from seismic data that $1.5 billion worth of oil may be pooled un der the palace — but added it was unlikely the venture would be profitable. The discovery is well-timed: the British royal family is un der pressure to reduce its pub lic role and cut costs. Oil potentially could save Queen Elizabeth from becoming a “bicycling monarch” — the sad fate forecast for her by govern ment ministers if the Labor Par ty ever gets into government. Labor leaders called this week for a smaller, less lavish monarchy, with fewer family members on the public payroll. Even if commercial reserves are found, the government will have first dibs on any oil royal ties because the castle — badly damaged by fire in 1992 — is maintained at public expense. Berkshire County Council is expected to give formal zoning permission for the test well Jan. 4, despite local anguish about damage to the 900-year-old cas tle and its wooded grounds. Dennis Otwin, lord mayor of the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, worried that drilling was “bound to lead to Windsor Great Park being turned almost into a second Dallas.” Oil was a surprising turn in the saga of a family whose royal motto might well be, “What next?” As of Friday, the second an niversary of their separation, FYince Charles and Princess Di ana will be free to seek a no fault divorce. They have not announced plans to do so, content for now to do battle in the bookstores. Diana is winning in both sales and sympathy. “Diana: Her New Life,” an account by Andrew Morton based on interviews with the princess’s friends, portrays Charles as cold and unfaithful, Diana as lonely and flaky. It is third on the best-seller list, a notch ahead of “The Prince of Wales” in which Charles admit ted his infidelity. 512-474-5750 HOUSTON REVIEWS January 14 & 15, 1995 Deadline: Dec. 19, 1994 AUSTIN REVIEWS January 28 & 29, 1995 Deadline: Jan. 9, 1995 YOU CAN SPIN A WHEEL OR GET A FREE T-SHIRT, OR YOU CAN COME TO YOUR TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE AND GET THE MOST MONEY BACK FOR YOUR BOOKS IN TOWN! r. Proposal to help disabled presidents keep order WASHINGTON (AP) — Outside doctors, not political associates, should decide whether the president is too ill to stay in office, Jimmy Carter says. His proposal comes just weeks af ter Ronald Reagan’s disclosure that he has Alzheimer’s disease. Carter announced that he has summoned a group to meet at the Carter Center in Atlanta to study the issue. He said he expected the meeting to produce “some concrete proposals and a commission to develop them further and to work toward implementing them.” The determination on a president’s fitness now would be made by the vice president and the Cabinet. “Many people have called to my atten tion the continuing danger to our nation from the possibility of a U.S. president be coming disabled, particularly by a neuro logic illness,” Carter wrote in an issue of the weekly Journal of the American Med ical Association that examines the question of presidential disability. Clinton made no mention of Reagan’s con dition. In Minneapolis, Dr. Steve Miles, a pro fessor of geriatric medicine at the University of Minnesota, recently wrote a newspaper ar ticle saying that he and other geriatricians were concerned during Reagan’s presidency by his behavior. Miles said he and his colleagues even considered appealing publicly for an exami nation of Reagan to see if he was suffering from Alzheimer’s but decided to do nothing “given White House medical reports that all was well.” “We were concerned by the increasing vagueness of his presidency, his inability to speak lucidly outside of brief, tightly con trolled settings,” Miles wrote in the Star Tri bune of Minneapolis. When Reagan, 83, disclosed his problem "Many people have called to my attention the danger to our nation from the possibility of a president becoming disabled." —Jimmy Carter, former President last month, his doctors said he was “entering the early stages of this disease.” Reagan has been out of office since January 1989. Carter’s proposal apparently could be accomplished without amending the Con stitution to change the 25th Amendment, adopted in 1967 to deal with presidential disability. It says that the vice president and a major ity of the Cabinet “or of such other body as Congress may by law provide,” can temporari ly transfer the powers of the president to the vice president when the group determines that the president is unable to function. If the president resists, it would require a two-thirds vote of each house of Congress to keep him from resuming power. Congress has not designated any other body to make the judgment. That part of the 25th Amendment has never been used. Carter said that as a practical matter th ; vice president and the Cabinet would rely on the president’s personal physicians. “We must find a better way,” Carter wrote. “This might be by creating a nonpartisan group of expert representatives of the medical community who are not directly involved in the case of the president. They could be given the responsibility for determining disability, thereby relieving the president’s physicians from their potential conflict of interest and en abling the 25th Amendment to work prudent ly and smoothly.” Carter called on the medical community to “awaken the public and political leaders of our nation to the importance and urgency of this problem.” He noted that most of the 18 presidents serving this century had serious medical problems. new on the BLOCK \ Buy your Christmas gifts and receive one free tan at Perfect Tan III with $25. purchase LACEY’S li l If STERLING & STONES casual • elegant $10 to $150 our specialty... genuine gemstone earrings & pendants <45 <5^ rig ICr U Northgate 104 college main at university between holick’s & perfect tan mm aggie owned & operated " Three Off-Campus Stores To Serve You Northgate - Culpepper - Village Make This An Aggie Shirts - Sweats - Plaques - Caps - Boxers - Glassware Mom & Dad Shirts 7 Lamps - Keychain Christmas Loose Diamonds Round Diamond Marquise Cut Carat Color Clarity Price Carat Color Clarity Price .31 H WS $650 00 .31 I Sil $475°° .35 H SI1 475 00 .31 H VS2 675°° .45 I Si2 850 00 .49 J SI2 1,050°° .60 I VS2 1,000°° .49 I VS2 1,176°° .69 H Si3 1,250“° .55 H SI2 1,550°° .70 I 12 850°° .57 K Sil 1,150°° .70 G SI1 1,975°° .62 E Si3 1,750°° .70 H SI1 2,115°° .68 J VS2 1,900°° .70 E Si2 2,350°° .69 K VVS2 1,750°° .72 G Si2/SIl 2,300°° .75 G VS1/WS2 3,500°° .82 J/K VS2 2,050°° .84 K/L Sil 2,150°° .95 I 11 2,275°° .94 K Sil 2,650°° 1.01 K VS1 2,350°° 1.12 H I 3,250°° 1.03 G VS1/WS2 5,300°° 102 H Si3 3,450°° 1.06 K 11 2,050°° .86 H Si2 2,850°° 1.16 J J Sil 3,950°° Oval 1.64 Sil 6,000°° 1.76 H Si3 6,500°° 1.79 H Si3 6,500°° Carat Color Clarity Price 9.51 L 11/12 29,500°° .40 J VS1 $675°° 1.02 I/J I 2,4500°° .50 I Si2 1,383°° 1.01 H Si2 3,600°° .53 G Si2 980°° 2.59 N Si2 5,500°° .77 E Si2 2,350°° Pear Shape 1.12 1.53 J I/J Si2 Sil 1,750°° 5,800°° Price 1.00 I Sil 3,550°° Carat Color Clarity .47 .49 F H Sil Sil $1,300°° 1,253°° Princess .50 .61 -78 -79 F I J/K K Si2 VS1 Sil Sil 1,100°° 1,220°° 1,750°° 1,675°° Carat .49 .53 Color K K Clarity SI1 VS1 Price $875°° 975°° .92 K VS2 2,300°° .80 J SI2 1,798°° 1.02 J J/K Sil 3,250°° 1.16 F 11 2,970°° 1.05 11 2,300°° .71 G WS2 2,475°° MON. - FRI. 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