Reagan delays tax hike The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 11, 1981-Page 3 Settlement reached in Mr. Bill case WASHINGTON (AP) - PresidenI Reagan said yesterday he is postponintg until January his plans for new tax in- creases and further cuts in benefit programs, and is determined to reject any spending bill that "abuses the limited resources of the taxpayers." Reagan, at a nationally broadcast news conference, declined to endorse a Senate Republican plan calling for higher taxes over the next three years to ensure a balanced budget by 1984. Instead, the president conceded that his - goal of eliminating red ink by that date appears out of reach$ THE PRESIDENT said he will defer until January two 1982 budget proposals he initially sent to Congress in Septem- ber - $3 billion in tax increases and $2.6 billion in benefit program cuts. With the Christmas holidays ap- proaching, "we just can't produce or get anything done by Congress in this interim period," he said, adding that he will reconsider proposals to increase taxes or make new program cuts early next year, when the administration must propose its budget plan for 1983. But the president said he was holding firm for an additional $8.4 billion worth of budget cuts he sought from Congress in September. REAGAN SAID most of the 1982 ap-- propriations bills working their way through Congress are running above the stringent spending ceiling he proposed in September. The president's budget office said two nearly completed spending bills are running more than $3 billion over Reagan's target.. "I will not stand still for budget- busting bills,'' Reagan said.: The president complained that none of the regular appropriations bills for fiscal 1982 has reached his desk. HOUSE MAJORITY Leader Jim Wright (D-Tex.) quickly retorted that the Democratic-controlled House had passed 11 of the 13 regular ap- propriations bills - and the two not yet passed were being held up for White House comments. Those 11 bills currently are awaiting action in the Senate, which is controlled by Reagan's allies. Wright also said those bills, taken as a whole, did not exceed Reagan's budget figures but in fact were $3.5 billion below the president's budget "The figures on balance reflect that the Congress has been responsive to the requests for trimming expenditures wherever possible, that we have acted expeditiously..." he said. NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Mock cries of "Oooh nooo!" rang out in a federal courtroom here yesterday as a judge took the scissors to Mr. Bill to sym- bolize a three-way out-of-court set- tlement over who owns rights to the comic clay character. Walter Williams, Vance deGeneres, and David Derickson each got a piece of a sliced-up Mr. Bill doll from a smiling U.S. District Judge Adrian Duplantier. DUPLANTIER presided for two days in the non-jury trial to decide who deserves the profits from Mr. Bill-the clay figure victimized by "Mr. Hands" and "Sluggo" in film shorts featured on television's "Saturday Night Live."- Duplantier was handed a Mr. Bill doll and cut it up. He had presided with a hand-scrawled sign identifying him as "Judge; Sluggo" taped casually to the front of his august mahogany bench, with a doll propped perilously close to his gavel. THE JUDGE had watched several videotapes of Mr. Bill being torn up, dropped, mashed, and drowned while crying helplessly, "Oooh nooo!" The film drew no outright laughter from the judge, but giggles could be heard from court clerks and the courtroom gallery. Williams, of New York, had testified he alone created Mr. Bill while a bud- ding filmmaker and comic writer living in New Orleans. But DeGeneres claimed he and Williams dreamed it up together and split the costs-including the film and x clay-while making the first Mr. Bill', film in the New Orleans apartment they shared in 1974. f Reagan ... postpones tax plans HAPPENINGS-1 GEO wins decision HIGHLIGHT Scientists at the University will join colleagues at some 140 other cam- puses in conducting a Convocation on the Threat of Nuclear War today. Topics and speakers for the event are a panel on "Nuclear Weapons and In- ternational Policy" chaired by Political ScienceProf:. Harold Jacobson and including Miroslav Nincic, J. David Singer and William Zimmerman, 4 p.m.; "The Medical Consequences of nuclear War," Richard Gardiner, 7 p.m.; and Nuclear War Strategies," Paul Walker, 8 p.m. Films will be shown beginning at noon today.- FILMS Classic Film Theater-Mississippi Mermaid, 3:15 & 7 p.m., Belle De jour, 5:15 & 9 p.m., Michigan Theater.e Union of Concerned Scientists-The War Game, 1035 Angell Hall, noon; Hiroshima/Nagasaki: August, 1945, 12:50 p.m.; War Without Winners, 1:10 p.m.; Armaments: The War Game, 1:45 p.m.; Decision to Drdp the Bomb, 2:10 p.m.; Hiroshima/Nagasaki: August 1945, 2:50 p.m.; Plutonium Connec- tion, 3:10 -p.m.; The Day After Trinity: J. Robert Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb, 2225 Angell Hall, 4 p.m.; War Without Winners, 5:35 p.m.; War Game, 6:10 p.m.; Eight Minutes to Midnight: A Portrait of Dr. Helen Caldicott, Rackham Ampitheater, 9:15 p.m. , .MEETINGS Commission for Women-Mtg., 2549 LSA, noon. Science' Fiction Club-Mtg., "Stilyagi Air Corps," Ground Floor Conf. Rm., Mich. Union, 8:15 p.m. Eastern Orthodox Christian Fellowship-Mtg., Conf. 5, Union, 7:30 p.m. Student government-LSA Student Government meeting, 3rd floor Union, MSA Chambers, 6:15 p.m._ SPEAKERS Classical Studies-Bernard Knox, "Early Greek Literacy," 2009 Angell Hall, 4:10p.m. ECKANKAR-Intro. talk, "The Benefits of Out-of-Body Experience," 302 E. Liberty, 7:30 p.m. Indus. & Opers. Eng,-Peter Politser, "Enhancement, Inhibition, and Structure in Diagnostic Test Evidence,"243W. Eng., 45 p.m. 'Earthwatch-Sanford Lewis, "How Much is a Life WorthThe Hazards of Cost-Benefig Analysis," Rm. 443, Mason Hall, 7:30 p.m. Communications-Brown Bag Sem., Janelle Shubert, "Conflict Resolution: New Directions," 2050 Frieze, noon; Morgan O'Leary Sym- posium, Trueblood Theater, Frieze, 3-5 p.m. South & Southeast Asian Studies-Peter Bertocci, "Discussion of Satyajit Ray's Film, 'Panther Panchali'," Rm. 48, noon, Lane Hall. Russian and East European Studies-Yvonne Lockwood, "Folklore, Fakelore, & Identity of the Burgerland Croats," Commons Rm., Lane Hall, noon.. Chem.-Thomas Blackburn, "Ion Chromatography," Rm. 1200, Chem., 4 p.m.; Sem., Thomas Guenther (title to be announced), Rm. 1300, 4 p.m. ISR-Lec., Computer Support Group, "OSIRIS IV-Structured Files in OSIRIS (session 1)," 6050 ISR, 1:30-3 p.m. ' Computing Center-Steve Burling, "Integrated Graphics '(session 1)," Sem. Rm., CC, 1:30-3 p.m; Lec., Dave Sun, "Debugging in PL/1 & PL/C," B120 MLB, 3:30 -5 p.m. Aerospace Eng,-R. Alan Dunlap, "New Developments at LMSC," 107 Aerospace Bldg., 3:30-5 p.m. CRLT/Library-Workshop, "Computerized Bibliographic Data Bases," 3- 5 & 7:30-9:30 p.m. Women of the 'U' Faculty-Frances Larkin, Assoc. Prof., Human Nutrition, SPH, "Food and Health: A Look at Suggested Relationships," Mich. League Conf. Rms., 4 & 5, 5:30 p.m. ELI-Charlotte Linde, co-director, Structural Sematics, "Aviation Ac- cidents: A Case Study in Applied Linguistics and Sociallinguistics," Mich. League, Henderson Room, 4:30 p.m. PERFORMANCES UAC-Laugh track, featuring Gary Kern, Univ. Club, Union, 9 p.m. School of Music-Faculty Guest Lecture/Recital-Louis Nagal, pianos; all-Schumann program, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Tau Beta Phi-Free tutoring, Walk-in, 307 UGLI & 2332 Bursley, 7-11 p.m. Ark-Hoot night, open mike;1421 hill, 9p.m. WCBN-"Radio Free Lawyer: Discussion of Legal Issues," 88.3 FM, 6 p.m. Extension Service-Mich. Scholars Conf., Rackham Bldg., Registration, 9 p.m. Society of Women Engineers-Pre-interview program, GTE Auto Elec- tron, 144 W. Eng., 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.: Applied Physics Lab-John Hopkins, 1-4 p.m. Natural Resources-Career afternoon, Dana Bldg., 3-4 p.m. Transcendental Meditation Program-An introduction, Rm. 4313, Union, 8 p.m. MEEKRAH-Felafel Study Break, Markley Concourse Lounge, 10 p.m. To submit itms for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. on right to bargain (Continued from Page 1) "As far as I'm concerned the issue is over and the University should recognizethem," he said. "That is my opinion and it has always been my opinion. It was my understanding that when a decision jas reached, no matter which way it went,-we would abide by it." Regent Nellie Varner also agreed with the decision. " I HAVE ALWAYS been of the belief they are employees," she said. "Unless there is something in the opinion that would change my mind, I wouldn't vote tp appeal it." Research assistants who comprise 17 percent of the University's GSAs are denied employee status in the decision because "they work in areas directly related and relevane to their educational goals and in every instance are employed through funds received from sources outside the University," the MERC decision said. GEO representatives said they were pleased with the decision, but they filed a counter-exception with MERC to protest theA exclusions of research assistants. Their appeal was denied. "WE'RE' NOT HAPPY about that, certainly," GEO executive committee member Paul Harris said. "But I couldn't tell you at this point what we could do about it." Unlike that of traditionaj labor unions, GEO's membership changes constantly with the waves of giadute students entering and leaving Ann Ar- bor. Although GEO currently has only 55 members, the union was once represented by more than 700 graduate student assistants. "Most students are interested in going to school now," Lemmer said in an interview this summer. "There is a lot of turnover. A group that was in- terested in this years ago may have been supplanted by a group who isn't." GEO members, however, attribute their small enrollment to the lengthy court process and the fact that graduate students haven't been able to see any immediate return for their ef- forts in recent years. "We are lodging a major organizational drive around our suc- cess in court," said Harris, "It ap- pears promising.." Under the new ruling, GEO would become an agency shop and the official bargaining representative for all GSAs. Should the Regents decide not to alt- peal the MERC decision or are unsuc- cessful in their attempts, all GSAs would have a financial obligation to GEO beginning next term. Harris said a mandatory representation fee-or op- tional dues based on the number of hours worked per week- probably would be assessed each term via some form of check-off system through the University. Harris said one of the major issues GEO hopes to address in the future is the declining rate of pay for GSAs. He said while GSA pay raises have been roughly equivalent to those granted the rest of the faculty, tuition costs going up at a much faster rate are further un- -dermining their pay scale. "We've been steadily depressed relative to the faculty in real wages," Harris said. "That will be one of the things we will be working to solve. We haven't really planned beyond the Regents meeting." In 1922, a conference between the United States and Canada perpetuated the Rush-Bagot Treaty concerning ar- mament on the Great Lakes. The original agreement, signed in 1817, limited the number and size of warships on the lakes. It has since been modified to permit the construction of larger vessels on the lakes. THE BOOK THAT STARTED A REVOLUTION IN PSYCHOTHERAPY. aE ARTHUR JANOV PH.D WITH A NEW FOREWORD BY THE AUTHOR The Primal Scream has been reprinted in paperback and is now available in bookstores! To order direct-send $6.95 plus $1.50 postage and handling to: Sales Dept., Perigee Books, 200 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10017. - - ""-" - ---"----""- - -------------------- - Mail to: Sales Dept., Perigee Books, 200 Madison Ave., NY, NY 10017 YES! I enclose $ for -books @ $6.95 plus $1.50 postage and handling (appropriate sales tax added in NY and NJ). Name. Address .Gity State _ m n-_ yo_ _ yZip Upon request, the Primal Institute will send you a complimenttary copy of its newsletter. Write to: The Primal Institute, 2215 Colby Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90064. Jr 4- I- 'I 4 4- 4 / Tape recorder stolen A tape recorder and a total of $12 were stolen from two separate rooms in Markley Dormitory yesterday, the University Safety Department repor- ted. The two apparently unlocked rooms on the first floor of Little-Hall were entered at about 3:30 a.m. Bill of Rights Article Ih T The Right to Throttle a Bottle. ( r Lonignecks Cheap! ( Every Monday Night. Article II.' You are Required to Register for the Draft Good Time Charley Wants You! aD Board Refills 50O Every Tuesday Night i .4 ' 1/ // I r/r LV Article II.' r rit ~ y r . r ,4"?' ~fifo Tbe Wild L te Preservation Act of 1981 'Save the Gators' Your Gator Drinks for Free! Gator Night. When Wearing an Aligator on a Piece of Clothing You Get Two Drinks For the Price of One! Every Wednesday Night Article IV.' An Act Soon to be World Famous! Pitcher Night rT --_. r I_ I t p Unver Mchi Women Annl The rsry of9S The University of Michigan WOMEN'S GLEE CL /,presents A A A I "Y"\ ~I DT""C UB D T See your Jostens' Representative. Date: Mon.-Fri. f