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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1985)
Pago 2 Thursday, March 14, 1935 Daiiy Nebraskan vetoed in Senate commii 14 r 4 It lf(( mrtn.il j)rm-jiar. IP) -nA r W'or i ; " , VI'' tjM ' I ) ' , , , ' , j , i I - - u ! ! ."'.Mi'.- 1 f-. , . JIlsliL. . . V ; )7SP INTO SPRING! U ' ( Yr j v: v.- v .... a. n M V V.v' lN-v ' i ,:y A i! . . M .1 J .. s tote f M fa .s . 1 jl WiwawaB-SiSsaVi.-.,,-.. , ,, xm ,,,.... .. .. j si-- ' .. It! I OFF EMTIRE STOCK Sj !Pb IhJJy jrXJl I iu3 CI dMyiSilo j ! I ;av, ,--: ' - . 1 j lj l.,u n i i s HERS CF PURE FASKON M OUririY'S COMPLEX, t3th end QGATEVAY MALL WASHINGTON The Republican-controlled Senate Eudget Commit tee Wednesday rejected President Reset's fiscal 1383 budget on grounds that it asks too much for defense and not enough for popular domestic programs. m t The committee, looking for a formula to cut federal Mdgst deficits, rejected Reagan's plan by a vote of 16-4. Last week the panel defeated the Reagan proposal in pieces. Wednesday it turned down the entire plan as a package. Reagan's budget projects a 1038 deficit cf $180 billion. Without the spending cuts proposed by the president, the deficit is expected to exceed $200 billion. The committee la trying to develop a budget for Senate consideration by mid-April that will cut the deficit to less than $100 billion by 1038. Bust! delwere note to Gorbaeliev MOSCOW Vice-President George Bush said after meeting new Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev Wednesday that President Reagan would be ready for a summit meeting when the Kremlin was. "I brought a letter. I won't discuss its contents but I believe that the president does feel a meeting would be useful," he said. Addressing a press conference after spending an hour and 25 minutes with the new Kremlin leader, Bush was asked when Reagan would be ready for a meeting. "I think that he would be ready as soon as the Soviet leadership would be," he replied. U.S. official sources in Moscow confirmed Washington reports that the letter Bush took to Gorbachev contained an offer of a summit. Washington sources said Reagan had not set a date and preferred to meet in the United States. Bush said he came away "high on hope" from his talk with Gorbachev, held after the new leader met a stream of foreign visitors following the funeral of the late President Konstantin Cherr.enko. Secret witness Icey in Goetz case NEW YORK The city's top prosecutor was undsr heavy guard Wed nesday after he reopened the case of Bemhard Goetz and said a secret witness would back attempted murder charges against the controversial subway vigilante.-' A grand jury in January refused to indict the 87-year-old Goetz for attempted murder after he shot four black teenagers oa a subway train when one of them demanded $5 from him. But Morgenth2u Tuesday won rare court permission for a new grand jury to hear the case, saying he had "substantial new evidence." Morgenthau said his new evidence would be presented by a witness, revealing for the first time that he had someone willing to testily against the vigilante who was hailed as a hero by thousands of New Yorkers fed up with street crime. The district attorney refused to give any details about the witness, citing security reasons. Moslem blames terrorism on U.S. BEIRUT, Lebanon A leader of the Moslem fundamentalist "Hizbal lah" (Party of God) said Wednesday the United States was responsible for terrorism through its support of Israel and faced possible retaliation. Sheikh Ibrahim al-Amin said a U.S. veto Tuesday of a U.N. Security Council resolution censuring Israel for its practices in south Lebanon showed that Washington was "responsible for every act d terrorism in the world." Asked whether Hizbollah, a pro-Iranian group which calls for an Islamic revolution in Lebanon, would strike at U.S. targets, Amin said: "It is up to the people, who have the right to retaliate ... to assists the Iwiid of aggressors." As a result of threats like these the States Department said it is reviewing day by day whether to evacuate American diplomats from Lebanon. The aircraft carrier Eisenhower is standi"' by fat the eastern Mediterranean. . " a ntiveo to propose eanc&mo WASHINGTON Three conservative Republican congressnten said Wednesday they mill introduce a bill to topes econosdc sanctions agstesSojith Africa and other nations that violate haraan rishts. The legislation was proposed by Bob Walker of Pennsylvania, Newt ipaDdcaMjhoissacdastateiaent zzt Bcccr.tcr '- r C:uthAMcato end its apartheid policies, breaking a p litem cf r---r;t f :r c ath Africa by American ccssenratrires; - The bill, to be iatrodaced r.sit mz rcu!d t:r tiiirJ contracts for Sw? Wt thrJ d0 f5t m Vdz cf rscrLtion in their rr? Tf m- Pcliciea wsre tzlillM by the Eev. Leon "CSh 5wSf? &sm FMlaihi s -cf J yn 0. The bill te u-s- representath-3 to tha Irien. i'icasi Monetary Z.JfT , 0? H8011 r.::;3 dtllM racial fttil 5 inf 'Jdm3 t not limited t3f-:r.::f,crr.coepeMte to Luen&ionai krprisa cr illegsl torstnililTiiJawiiprchlbit gZZi 51?5 8a f of the to Hi tt::r'-bns Egainst .