IV TAT1 'll (2! Associated Press Nebraskan ^ X T V2 VV U> ML~J iCLV C* i Edited by Jana Pedersen Monday, October 8,1990 New proposal may beat Tuesday shutdown deadline Lawmakers continue budget negotiations WASHINGTON - Democratic leaders pre dicted Sunday that a new budget agreement easing Medicare cuts and tempering excise tax increases will be reached before the govern ment shutdown takes full effect Tuesday. Democrats told their leaders to go ahead with a plan designed to let Democratic-con trolled committees draft later the specifics for reaching $5(X) billion in deficit reduction over the next five years. Republicans were balking but House Speaker Thomas S. Foley, D-Wash., said he might go ahead with it anyway. Informal bipartisan talks continued into the night Sunday as the House remained on standby to consider any plan put before it. The Senate, meanwhile, convened at 6 p.m. and adjourned 12 minutes later after conclud ing that it would be hours, at best, before anything concrete would emanate from the House. That meant there was no chance of a final budget agreement being approved Sunday, but the practical impact of pushing a decision into today was marginal since it is Columbus Day — a federal holiday. Republicans and Democrats, meanwhile, continued to blame each other for the partial government shutdown that closed federal tour ist attractions and other weekend programs nationwide. Foley said President Bush’s veto Saturday of a bill designed to keep the government operating during the negotiations was “a bad mistake” that had slowed the talks. -a There's not a dime s worth of tax increases, not ten cent's worth of cuts in the budget resolution. It allows the com mittees to consider these issues. Foley House speaker -„ _ The president was ‘‘saying wc ought to rebuild the fiscal house of this country and (then he) sets the house on fire for awhile to get our attention,” Foley said. Bush spent Sunday at his mountaintop re treat at Camp David, Md., conferring by tele phone with his chief of staff, John Sununu, and Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brady, part of the administration team that negotiated the defeated budget pact. Vice President Dan Quayle, appearing on ABC-TV’s “This Week With David Brinkley” program, said Bush was not the problem, “The problem is Congress.” Quayle predicted that 90 percent of the budget deal Bush unsuccessfully lobbied for last week would remain, and would pass with a few changes. “We now know what the problems were with the old one,” agreed Sen. James Sasser, D Tenn., chairman of the Senate Budget Com mittee. “The new budget agreement in my view will address the problem of the overly large Medi care cuts ... and also will address the revenue part of the package,” said Sasser, also appear ing on ABC. The draft plan circulated in the House would reduce from $60 billion to $42 billion the amount that Medicare would contribute to deficit reduction over the next five years. Beneficiaries of Medicare coverage would only be expected to bear S12 billion ot the cost, compared to $28 billion in the original pack age. The rest would be made up by limiting allowances for providers of the medical serv ices for the elderly. Although the draft did not spell out details, legislators said they were told the deductible for doctors’ bills would rise from $75 to SUM), instead of $150 in the original plan. In addition, monthly premiums would rise ata much slow er rate. Opposition from the public to the package seemed to concentrate on a list of provisions including the Medicare premiums and fees, and a 12-ccnt motor fuel boost and a 2 cent tax on home healing oil which the new plan might also change. In a closed-door caucus that members said showed deep divisions in the ranks, many GOP members told their leaders they now were ready to go along with raising income tax rates on the wealthy in order to win for Bush a cut in the tax rate on capital gains. But there was no assurance in the draft the Democrats would make that trade, which Republicans had op posed in the original pact. Beast hunters fail to locate fl elusive Nessie I DRUMNADROCHIT, Scotland - 1 A two-day search for the Loch Ness i monster ended Sunday with two blips I on a radar screen but no evidence of I the legendary beast. § National oddsmakers William Hill I Organization Ltd., which had offered | 250,000 pounds ($4 77,500) for “con- . 1 elusive evidence” of Nessie, kept its | reward but paid 1,500 pounds ($2,850) I to a Scottish company for the best search method. Oceanscan, which supplies under water sonar equipment for the North Sea oil industry, used underwater radar and registered an unidentified object up to 26 feet long. “The object which showed up yesterday registered as two blips on the sonar screen but it moved out of range very quickly. We can’t be sure what it was,” said Andy Gray, Ocean scan’s managing director. The three other hunting parties participating in the first major search in three years came up empty. The lake is 754 feet deep, 23 miles long and a mile wide. William Hill is offering 100-1 odds that Nessie’s existence will not be authenticated within a year. 1\t ipaily Nebraskan Editor Erie Planner 472- 1766 Managing Editor Victoria Ayotte Assoc News Editors Darcle Wlegert Diane Brayton Editorial Page Editor Llaa Donovan Wire Editor Jane Pedersen Copy Desk Editor Emily Rosenbaum Sports Editor Darren Fowler Night News Editors Matt Herek Chuck Green Art Director Brian ShellIto Writing Coach Amy Edwards General Manager Dan Shattll Production Manager Katherine Pollcky Advertising Manager Loren Melrose Sates Manager Todd Sears Publications Board Chairman Bill Vobejda 436-9993 Professional Adviser Don Walton 473- 7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144 080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Union 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday dunng the academic year, weekly during summer sessions Readers are enoouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9am and 5 p m Monday through Friday The public also has access to the Publications Board For information, contact Bill Vobejda, 436 9993 Subscription price is $45 for one year Postmaster Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan. Nebraska Union34,1400 R Si .Lincoln, NE 68588 0448 Second class postage paid at Lincoln, NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT _1990 DAILY NEBRASKAN rl 'Ijiv W MAl'4rj 'arL?Svi- ■? ' T With support from: kinkO'S the copy center i _ _