The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 5, 1981-Page 5 Reagan lobbies for budget cuts From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan, trying to build a foundation of *ongressional support for politically un- popular budget cuts, made an extraor- dinary trip to Capitol Hill yesterday to sell his case to Senate and House leaders. Today he will begin his effort to sell the programs to the American public, with a televised speech to the nation. White House press secretary James Brady said the address was undergoing "substantial rewriting" by the *president. THE PRESIDENT has come under increasing pressure to assauge fears that his efforts to stem the growth of the, foderal budget will not be made at the expense of the poor and most needy in thenation. As he returned to the White House af- ter the 75-minute discussion on Capitol Hill, Reagan said, "It was a good meeting, just to extablish a base." Some Republican congressmembers this week received a preliminary list of proposed cuts for the rest of fiscal 1981 and for 1982. But Reagan himself did not discuss his upcoming economic package at yesterday's meeting of House and Senate leaders from both parties. ONE MEMBER who attended the meeting with Reagan said the president only repeated he would send the package to Congress Feb. 18. He said Reagan "stressed that he wasn't cut- ting the size of the budget but the in- crease in the size of the budget," now projected at about $740 billion for fiscal 1982 starting Oct. 1. The administration has targeted for deep cuts next year many popular social programs that pay benefits to in- dividuals, and also will propose a reduction in grants to state and local governments, congressional sources said. Among the social programs are food stamps, extended unemployment benefits, public service jobs, child nutrition and Medicaid. SOURCES SAID the Reagan list calls Study says *test tube conception Attention All Bookworms: Now that your midterms are over, TAKE A BREAK! P subscribe today 764-0558 I I : " i 2 IN"IVIUAL' EATRES 5th Ave at Liberty 761-4700 LAST 14 DAYS "AWESOME" A Film by Akira Kurosawa PRESIDENT REAGAN met yesterday with bipartisan congressional leaders in an effort to gain support for proposed budget cuts. From left .AP Photo are: Senate Majority Whip Ted Stevens of Alaska, House Speaker Tip O'Neill, Reagan, Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee, and Senate Minority Leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia. THE SHADOW WARRIOR Thurs., Fri-6:30 9:15 for cutting grants to states and local communities by 15 to 20 percent and distributing the aid as block grants, rather than for a variety of categorical programs, such as transportation and urban development. Not all, those changes would take place in 1982. It calls for a major change in the trade adjustment assistance program, which ballooned to $3 billion from about $300 million mostly to help steel and auto workers who lost jobs because of foreign imports. Benefits would not be available unless unemployment benefits were exhausted, sources said. That would all but eliminate the program. EXTENDED unemployment benefits, which jobless workers receive after 26 weeks of regular benefits end, would also be reduced. White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said the president told the lawmakers: "We're in a difficult situation. We need the support of the American people. We need the support of the Congress." The president has come under in- creasing pressure to assauge fears that his efforts to stem the growth of the federal budget will not be made at the expense of the poor and most needy. BRADY SAID the president, in for- mulating his economic program, was trying to "weed out the greedy to help the needy." "No programs that are a safety net for the poor, the indigent and the truly needy are going to be eliminated," he said. Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee left the Capitol meeting with Reagan saying, "I'm convinced the president will propose tax relief and spending cuts together." He said Reagan left no doubt "there will be linkage between a tax cut on one hand and spending cuts on the other." U WITH THIS ENTIRE AD one admission $2.00 any film Good Mon. thru Thurs. Eves vid thru 2-5-81 "H" I Iran tries American journalist as spy STARTS TOMORROW UILY TOMUIN AN EPIC COMEDY THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING WOMAN Fri-8:00, 9:50 FINAL 2 WKS A ROBERT ALTMAN FILM ' k (P0) "s Thurs-6:30, 8:30 Fri-6:00 9 k risky ry e, (Continued from Page 1) California, were not involved in negotiations to free the 52 Americans seized in the U.S. Embassy takeover Nov. 4; 1979. The Swiss diplomat who attended the trial, Wilhelm Schmid, was reached by The Associated Press by telephone in Tehran and said Dwyer "was very hap- py to see and learn that finally there seems to be some sort of decision about her case." He said she was charged with "spying - acting against the best in- terests of the Islamic Republic of Iran. In the event she is released, we will do everything in our power to help with the arrangements for leaving the country." He said information on release of Sobhani had come from Sobhani's brother in Los Angeles. Morris Sobhani said) his -brother married an Iranian wonanin Tehran and that the family had no information on whether the freed man would return to the United States. According to the State Department there was no new information on a third U.S. citizen in Iranian custody, Zia Nassri, who was born in Afghanistan. There was no information on when he was arrested or why he was held. BOSTON (AP) - Conceiving babies in test tubes could result in slightly more birth defects, but the risk is so small that the controversial procedure may be a useful last resort for barren couples, a Harvard study concludes. The report cautions, however, that the odds are slim that the procedure will work and it should be used only af- ter all other fertility treatments fail. SO FAR, THREE children around the world are known to have been con- ceived in test tubes, then implanted into their mothers' wombs. The latest review of the procedure was written by Dr. John Biggers of Harvard Medical School and published in today's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. "The evidence suggests that the danger of increased congenital defects is not high," Biggers wrote. "The risk seems considerably lower than that ac- cepted by couples with a recessive inherited defect who decide to have a child even though they know that an abnormal baby may be born." THE DEFECT most likely to result from test tube conception is an extra set of chromosomes, Biggers said. But when such embryos are transferred in- to-their mothers' wombs, almost all die, as they do in natural pregnancies. The idea of test tube babies was first spggested in an editorial - "Concep- tion in a watch glass" - published 43 years ago in the New England Journal. It was finally accomplished three years ago, with the birth in England of Louise Brown. That test tube baby and one other bir- th were the work of the two pioneers in the field, Dr. Patrick Steptoe of Oldham General Hospital in England and Dr. Robert Edwards of Cambridge Univer- sity. The third baby was fertilized by doctors at the Royal We nen's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. The only American test tube baby clinic is at Eastern Virginia Medical School, but that clinic has yet to produce a baby. "The chances of achieving pregnancy even with repeated operations, are ex- tremely small," Biggers wrote. Once a woman has been chosen for the procedure, the chances are 4 percent that a single try will result in a birth. MIDNGHTANN ARBOR THEATRES CHEAP FLICKS FRI & SAT Dwyer ...'charged with espionage Missing promoter fled threats; cites bankers in boxing scandal F' Cheech & Chong's p (R) AT I MIDNIGHT ;r z s a ; z f .. ''. LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man pur- porting to be a missing boxing promoter named in a $21.3 million bank embezzlement suit says he fled the country after his life was threatened and his 4-year-old son was kidnapped because "I learned too much." He charged the scandal, involving Muhammad Ali Professional Sports Inc., actually involves dozens of of- ficials of Wells Fargo Bank and as much as $300 million over several years. THE MAN, identified in a radio in- terview as promoter Howard Smith, who had been missing for days after the boxing scandal broke open, said he had "come back to fight." "I'm a fighter, and I don't run from nothing," he said. "I'm not afraid to die if I know what the purpose is." Officials of San Francisco-based Wells Fargo scoffed at the allegations yesterday, calling them "preposterous." The bank Monday filed the civil em- bezzlement suit against Smith, chair- man of the sports promotion organization known as MAPS, and several other officials of the organization that sponsored numerous boxing matches and the annual Muhammad Ali track meet. MAPS HAS NO connections with Ali other than the use of his name for a fee. Since allegations of embezzlement sur- faced last week, Ali has asked that his name be dropped from the group's title. The man identified as Smith told KABC Sports Talk host Bud Furillo on Tuesday that he retrieved his son from kidnappers, then took his family to Switzerland for their safety. He told The New York Times that the kidnappers threatened to kill the boy AT MIDNIGHT NIGHT FTHE LIVING (R) ALL SEATS $2.00 "for what I can tell." Asked who the kidnappers were, the man told Furillo: "Well, you can start at the Miracle Mile District of Wells Fargo bank (on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles) This thing involves bank officials." FURILLO, A long-time Los Angeles sports journalist, said he has dealt with Smith in the past and is convinced the caller was indeed Smith. Times sports writer Michael Katz said he also believed the man was Smith. ......... POETRY READING with Carolyn Gregory Don Mager, Jane Dobija Reading from their works 7:30 p.m. Thurs., February 5 Admission: FREE GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE-662-5189 NOON LUNCHEON Home-made Soup and Sandwich 754 Friday February 6th Prof. TOM WEISSKOPF, Dept. of Economics: "Ronald Reagan meets the Economic Crisis: What can we expect?" (Rescheduled from last Friday) CINEMASET PRESENTSI TONIGHT 7:00 & 9:00 LORCH HALL PANDORA'S BOX (G. W. Pabst, 1928) The pioneering playwright, Franz Wedekind, idolized by the young Germans of the early 20th century, stressed sexual frankness and a Nietzchean will to power. His most remarkable creation is the female world spirit, Lulu-amoral, bisexual, the ruiner of lives, and fated to meet her oppressor, Jack the Ripper. A triumph of Expressionist art, with the haunt- ingly beautiful Louise Brooks in her most ethereal performance. (110 min.) FRIDAY, FEB. 6 7:00 & 9:00 AUD. A, ANGELL LE CD C LI f"TDT LI LIT MICHIGAN THE BIRDS THEATRE