Page 10-Wednesday, March 11, 1981-The Michigan Daily LESS BUTTER, MORE GUNS Budget sent to Congress WASHINGTON (AP)-President Reagan laid before Congress yesterday a $695 billion budget he claimed would return government to "economic sanity" through overall cuts of $48.6 billion despite a bolstered military. Reagan's revised fiscal 1982 program would boost defense spending by $4.8 billion and slash 300 domestic programs from the. projections left 'by Jimmy Carter. IT STILL WOULD leave a $45 billion deficit, partly stemming from Reagan's separate proposals to cut tax rates. Budget Director David Stockman toldr reporters that the administration's ap- proach would save $409 billion in the next five years, about three-quarters of the reductions necessary to meet the president's goal of balancing the budget in 1984. The budget contained $13.8 billion worth of newly announced cuts, in- cluding deeper reductions than- previously sought in welfare, water projects, job programs, public housing, food stamps and education. First-time You Can Still Make A Difference* While careers in public service may not be as fashionable as they were a decade ago, such careers can be very rewarding and personally satisfying. After just three months of intensive training at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you will be prepared to work in govern- ment agencies, public service organizations and law firms as a Legal Assistant in the fields of Administrative and Public Law or Criminal Law. You will do work traditionally performed by attorneys. You will work in the dynamic field of govern- ment legislation and regulation and be involved in such areas- as: Environmental Law, Food Drug and Health Law, Criminal Justice, Equal Opportunity, Welfare, Energy, and Product Safety Law. 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REAGAN SAID IN his formal message accompanying the document that it "will stop runaway inflation and revitalize our economy if given a chan- ce." He asked Congress to join him in a quest to "move America back toward economic sanity." The revised budget updated a preliminary spending cut plan the president announced last month. It was sent to Congress along with Reagan's proposal to trim personal income tax rates by nearly 36 percent over the next three years and cut business tax rates through accelerated depreciation schedules. The Pentagon's share of the budget would rise from 24 cents of each federal dollar this year to 27 cents in 1982 and 37 cents by 1986 under Reagan's plan., BENEFIT programs that provide aid to individuals, such as Social Security and unemployment compensation, would continue to account for about 48 cents of each federal dollar. Reagan's spending plan, certain to stir a rousing fight in Congress, shows a startling shift in priority from social programs to a defense system beefed up by new weapons development. Like Reagan's previous proposals, most of the new cuts must still be ap- proved by Congress and special interest groups were sure to fight decreases in their areas. The liberal Americans for Democratic Action called the proposals "Alice in Wonderland" economics that take from the "needy to give to the greedy." * House Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D- Mass.) assailed the package as leaving too many questions unanswered and predicted the current surge of pro- Reagan sentiment will abate "when people truly appreciate" what the cuts will mean to the nation. "Then," he said, "the wind will blow." Reagan said his budget recommen- dations would preserve the "social safety net" of income security programs-such as basic Social Security pensions and regular unem- ployment benefits-that grew out of the Great Depression of the 1930s. And he defended his call for in- creased military spending on the grounds that "a margin of safety must be created by rebuilding the nation's defense capabilities." AP Photo' PLACARDS, SUCH AS these, greeted President Reagan in Canada yester- day during his first official visit outside the U.S. The term acid rain refers to what Canadians say is the flow of industrial smoke from the U.S. that turns into sulphuric acid when mixed with rain. Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECS FOUNDATION 20 % Discount Sony Tape Recorders Michigan Union Anderson Rooms Thurs. March 12 9 till 6 G.D.D. Inc. 280 Collingwood 663-2981 Protestors greet Reagan on first vistt to Canada 0 From AP and UPI OTTAWA - Jeered by Canadian demonstrators during his first official visit outside the United States, President' Reagan met yesterday with Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau on problems that come between neighbors. In public, Reagan and Trudeau spoke mostly of the long friendship between the two countries, but they made no effort to ignore the several hundred demonstrators, a noisy minoir- ity in a largely welcoming crowd. Protestors dramatized with jeers and placards the differences between the United States and Canada over energy policy, environmental issues, fishing rights and U.S. military aid to El Salvador. THE BRIEF REMARKS by both Trudeau and Reagan were interrupted by hecklers' taunts. Demonstrators burned a U.S. flag and shouted "Yankee Go Home!" on Parliament Hill. Trudeau, known for his clever tongue in dealing with hecklers, returned to the microphone after Reagan spoke. "Hey guys!" he said to the crowd. "When I go to the United States, I'm not met by these kinds of signs. You, know the Americans have some beefs against us, too, but they receive us politely. Now, how about a great cheer for President 0 Reagan." SOME OF THE thousands of non-protesting spectators on the Parliament lawn replied with a lusty cheer. The two leaders, who had never met, sat down for a 15- minute introductory chat in Trudeau's oak-paneled office on Parliament Hill. Then they called in their aides for a discussion of El Salvador, East-West relations and the poten- tial impact of Reagan's economic program on the United States's closest and largest trading partner. A three-way summit between the U.S., Canada and Mexico was proposed by Trudeau after Reagan explained his proposal for a North American accord among the three neighbors. "It was a very warm meeting," said White House Press Secretary James Brady. "I think the president enjoyed Trudeau and it appeared to be mutual."