The Michigan Daily-Saturday, December 5, 1981-Page 3 Reagan administration I may no WASHINGTON (AP)- The Reagan administration may soon try to more than double the federal gasoline tax-a move that congressional sources say will meet strong opposition on Capitol Hill, especially in an election year. Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis says the new taxes are needed to meet highway construction and repair needs. To blunt some of the congressional criticism, he suggested recently that 1 penny of the increase by funneled to mass transit. A PROPOSAL discussed increasingly by Lewis and his staff would boost the gasoline tax from 4 cents to 9 cents. One penny of the increase would go to mass transit construction and the other 4 cen- ts would go into the highway trust fund. The plan has been mentiohed several times by Lewis in recent weeks and was reiterated by his top deputy, Darrell Trent, at a meeting Thursday with city and county officials at the White House. Lewis is expected to try to sell other Cabinet members and the White House u ible gasoline on the idea in the coming months. While (coming) year." Treasury Secretary Donald Regan is crease "as we ge said to oppose any such new taxes, tion," he predicted some senior White House officials and All members of Budget Director David Stockman are third of the SenateE described as leaning in Lewis' favor. next year. BUT, ACCORDING to sources at Senate source several House and Senate tax and tran- ministration woul sportation committees, it is highly support from a "d unlikely that Congress will want to mass transit andr tackle additional gasoline taxes during have any chance of the 1982 election year. opposition still In 1975-when gasoline was con- congressmen who+ siderably cheaper and the energy crun- increases not aim ch more apparent-a prdposal to double federal deficit. the gas tax managed only 57 votes in the Lewis wants the House. because the costso "We didn't even come close," said a tion and repair are+ House Ways and -Means Committee in the coming y staff member. "Now with gas $1.35 and coming into the hi no sense of crisis, it's going to be that diminishing asn much harder." gasoline. "I THINK they have a long way to go States are facin to getting a constituency to get it 32 state legislatur passed," said one Senate committee gasoline taxes du staffer. "It's not going to happen this years. tax Opposition will in- t closer to the elec- 1. the House and one- are up for re-election es say the ad- ld have to develop delicate coalition" of highway interests to f success. Significant would come from oppose any new tax ned at reducing the new gasoline taxes of highway construe- expected to increase years while money ighway trust fund is motorists use less g similar problems; es have levied new uring the past two AP Photo Double parked Two cars wound up in a precarious position after an accident Thursday on Chicago's Lake Shore Drive. So liarity urged to call strike Reagan OKs but WASHINGTON (AP)- President Reagan yesterday en- dorsed a compromise plan worked out by his staff and Republican congressional leaders to cut $4 billion from the domestic budget and avert another government spending crisis. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes an- nounced Reagan "is willing to accept the agreement" reached Thursday night and hopes it will be incorporated in new emergency spending legislation to replace a continuing resolution that expires Dec. 15. THE CUTS IN the compromise agreement would "go half- way toward meeting the request Reagan made in Septem- ber," Speakes said. The White House had said on several oc- casions it was willing to settle for half the amount Reagan proposed in his Sept. 24 package of budget cuts. Earlier yesterday, Reagan signed the first of 13 regular appropriations bills for 1982. He said then that he was "pleased with the progress" of negotiations but refused to specifically endorse the tentative agreement. Congress so far has passed only three of 13 appropriations bills, forcing the government to operate on emergency resolutions 'such as the one approved just before Thanksgiving after the government temporarily ran out of money. dget compromise REAGAN WON a showdown then, vetoing a compromise resolution that the administration said had only $2 billion in domestic spending cuts. After the president ordered all non- essential operations suspended, Congress agreed to continue the old level of spending until Dec. 15 as a stopgap measure House Republican leader Robert Michel, one of those who helped hammer out the new agreement; said yesterday he was "very optimistic that we can fly this thing." However, key House Democrats, who hold the majority in that chamber, were not involved in formulation of the new plan. SPEAKES SAID the White House did not consult Democratic leaders before Reagan issued his endorsement. But sources on Capitol Hill said several Republicans had had informal discussions with key House and Senate Democrats in an attempt to smooth the way for the plan. On Sept. 24, Reagan asked Congress for $8.4 billion more in domestic spending cuts-12 percent across the board-than he had asked for in his original budget proposal last spring. "The president has met us more than halfway this time" by accepting "some of our priorities" in achieving the com- promise of $4 billion in savings, Senate GOP Whip Ted Stevens of Alaska said yesterday. WARSAW, Poland (AP)- Rank and file pressure mounted on Solidarity yesterday to call a general strike, and a hardline Communist Party member urged the Polish government to take extraordinAty measures to head off bloodshed. Solidarity's 900,000-member Warsaw branch, still on strike alert over a police raid that ended a protest at the firefighters' academy Wednesday, published a list of demands it said the government must now meet. IT SAID IT would not come to terms with the regime without an end to repression, a new trade union law and economic reform, democratic elec- tions, improved food control, an in- dependent economic watchdog panel and access to radio and television. Although such demands have been the subject of talks before, it was the first time such a list appeared in the form of what amounted to an ultimatum, observers said. It put new pressure on Solidarity's national leaders, who threatened on Thursday to, call a 24-hour general strike if Parliament enacted a proposed strike ban and one of indefinite duration if the government tried to enforce it. THE COMMUNIST Party newspaper Trybunu Ludu accused Solidarity of pointing the "strike pistol" at authorities under "any pretext," Tadeusz Grabski, who heads the party in Poznan, told the hardline daily Reality, "We know that the conflict has not been extinguished, that the crisis has been aggravated many times over and that all the perils facing this nation, including that of bloodshed, have not vanished but grown." "The authorities. . . cannot find ways of enforcing their decisions and counter destruction," Grabski said. "They have indeed done little in this field, not to sa nothing."' Grabski said that the curre situation demanded "extraordinai measures. Resolute action is neede the interrupting for a time of all strik and demonstrations, the stamping o of rebellion. It is necessary1 reanimate the law.. . on the liquidatii of illegal activities aimed against tl state and its institutions. "I BELIEVE that the overwhelmin so-called silent majority of our nati4 would approve the taking of extrao dinary measures. We are facing tt ultimate decision." Poland's latest crisis erupted We nesday when 500 commandos stormE the firefighters' academy in Warsa and ousted 320 cadets who occupied ti building for eight days demandi. civilian status and inclusion of the school in a new academic reform bill. ay nt ry 'd, es ut to on he ge on r- he d- ed 45 killed in India stampede Unemployment hits six-year hig WASHINGTON (UPI) - More than 10 million Americans were out of work in November, pushing the unemployment rate to a six-year high of 8.4 percent amid a deepening recession, the government reported yesterday. Even the advent of Christmas shopping'failed to curb the jobless trend, with officials reporting that merchants hired fewer workers than usual in the pre-holiday period. OF THE TOTAL unemployed, over 9 million were still looking for jobs, while the remaining 1 million were listed as "discouraged workers" who have given up the hunt. In Oc- tober the number of unemployed Americans seeking work stood at 8.5 million. ' Blue-collar workers and teenagers took the brunt of November's downward economic trend. The 21.8 percent rate for teenagers was a record high since the Labor Depar- tment began keeping monthly statistics in the mid-1940s. President Reagan termed the high number of Americans unemployed "a very great tragedy." AT THE SAME time, White House officials remained op- timistic that Reagan's economic program will reverse the trend next year. "This is the price you have to pay for bringing down flation," said deputy press secretary Larry Speakes. " feel proper measures are in place to put the economy back track. We believe unemployment will begin to abate nE year." But on Capitol Hill, Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass.) sa "The president promised that his economic plan would bri jobs, jobs and more jobs. Instead, it has brought recessi recession and more recession." KENNEDY ACCUSED the administration of "playing Sa ta Claus for the wealthy and scrooge for the working people Sen. Robert Jepsen (R-Iowa), countered at a congression hearing by saying that if Congress had passed Reagai original tax cut, "We would not now be seeing the unei ployment rates that we see today." The overall rate increased 0.4 percentage points from o tober's 8 percent and stood at the highest level since the 19' 75 recession. The total number of unemployed people seeki work was listed at 9,004,000. November's 21.8 percent jobless rate for teenagers was t highest on record, with nearly 1.9 million people aged 16 to unemployed. The previous high was 20.9 percent in June 197 Lw NEW DELHI, India (UPI)- A stam- he pede of more than 400 screaming school ng children-touched off when young men ir began sexually molesting women tourists during a blackout-killed 45 people yesterday in a human pileup on the winding steps of an ancient tower. L hPolice said 23 of the dead were - children. AT LEAST 30 people-mostly in- elementary school children as young as We five-were injured in the stampede on down the narrow steps of the 234-foot ext tall Outab Minar tower, which momen- ts before had been plunged into dd, darkness by a power failure. ing Survivors said panic erupted when a on, group of women tourists started pushing and shoving their way down the steps of the 13th Century tower, an- shouting they were being molested by ." the men in back of them. nal Horrified screams resounded through n's the stone structure as hysteria seized m- the crowd of tourists and school children descending the circular stairs, )c- which measured 3-feet-11 inches at the 74- top and widening to 4-feet-9-inches at ng the bottom, witnesses said. THE BODIES were sent to two he hospitals where grief-stricken parents 19 gathered to search for their sons and 75. daughters. Inside the musty mortuary of the All- India Institute of Medical Sciences, seven dead school boys lay sprawled on the floor with th'e word "unknown" written across white bandages on their chests. Next door in the autopsy room, doc- tors huddled over two men. AS THE BODY of one boy-his eyes open and a smile on his face-was rolled out of the hospital's white rear doors, his father, standing nearby, collapsed on the ground in tears. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi visited the hospitals and parliament adjourned for the day in miourning. The tragedy was the worst accident in the history of the 781-year-old tower, built by the first sulan of Delhi, Qutab- Uddin-Aibak, to commemorate his vic- tories in battle. THE TALLEST stone tower in" New Delhi, it is now a tourist attraction and a plate from which many unhappy lovers have leaped to their deaths in recent years. FLORLIDA VACATION ONLY $8.95!1* So you and your friend can't go to Florida for Christmas? We can send Florida to you. FLORiDA PACKAGE INCLUDES 0 Sand (Clearwater Beach) 0 Suntan ol 0 Shels 0Pam leaf * postcards (2)0*Sunglasse AVACATION FOR YOU O TMAS FOR YOUR FRIEND AT CH -plus $1 00 posroge and nondlog endacou spotage and handing hargo ro AnesnCo 4814 Forango Rtoad Tampa Forida 33609 -HAPPENINGS- HIGHLIGHT The University's Center for the Continuing Education of Women will spon- sor a conference on "Image of Professionalism: Issues for Women in Scien- ce," from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Rackham's East Conference Room. For further information, call 764-2382. FILMS Alt. Act.-The Buddy Holly Story, 7 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 4. AAFC-9 to 5,7 & 9 p.m., MLB 3. CG-Straw Dogs, 7 & 9:05 p.m., Lorch Hall. C2--The Decline of Western Civilization, 7 & 9 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Mediatrics-Atlantic City, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. MISCELLANEOUS Ann Arbor Civic Theater-A Life in the Theater, 8 p.m., Civic Theater, 338 S. Main. Alumni Theater Series-Seminar, Jack Bender's Mornings At Seven, 10 a.m., League Henderson Room. PTP-Mornings At Seven, 8 p.m., Power Center. Theater & Drama-The House of Barnarda Alba, 8 p.m., Frieze Trueblood Theater. School of Music-Double bass recital, 4 p.m., Recital Hall; Contemporary Directions Ensemble, 8 p.m., Rackham; Piano recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Percussion recital, 8 p.m., Rehearsal Hall. UAC-How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. 8 p.m.. Men- MSU trustees axe alumni group funds (Continued from Page 1) of its successor. Sederburg, who presented the board with a resolution from 34 senators op- posing the disfranchisement, said later the move "makes it harder to sell Michigan State University and its programs in the Legislature" and could have an impact on appropriations for the fiscally strapped college. He blamed the situation on the board's "isolation" from the views of the community and the Legislature. He said he felt Mackey "started the ball rolling down hill" with his effort to have Kinney removed. Sederburg said Mackey's position seems "very secure as long as he has the board of trustees on his side." The thing Mackey has to worry about is the next election, the Republican lawmaker said, however. Join The Daily Staff THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY or TJe ff I Iiower& I