Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 6, 1984 Dem candidates meet head on PITTSBURGH (AP) - Democratic presidential, candidates, debating in steel country five days before the Pen- nsylvania primary, vowed to protect the poor and the elderly, saying the Reagan administration has been remiss. Walter Mondale also launched a new attack on the administration's in- tegrity. Seeking votes in a region with troubled industry, Mondale, Sen. Gary Hart, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson also -promised efforts to protect troubled basic industries - such as steel. Hart said he would seek federal loan guaran- tees, if necessary. "Loans would be ob- tained through presidential leader- ship," he said. "NOT A BAILOUT here or there, but the entire steel industry," he said. This is the distinction Hart sought to draw in recent campaigning as he explained his Senate vote against a Chrysler bailout. He also said he would get "the management of the steel company and the United States Steel Workers in the Oval office and negotiate an agreement" for revitalizing the in- dustry. "The great challenge of our party and our nation is to alter the misery index," said Jackson. "In this administration, the danger index is on the rise. Our par- ty must have an obligation to fight for a peace policy not a war policy." MONDALE, lately criticizing Reagan appointees who have gotten into trouble over allegations of misuse of office, ridiculed the president's declaration Wednesday that he would take no action against officials who were the target of allegations still unproven. He said the Reagan standard ap- Democratic presidential candidates Gary Hart, Jesse Jackson, and Walter Mondale chat together prior to their debate last night in Pittsburgh sponsored by the League of Women Voters. parently is "You can stay in gover- nment, you can be attorney general, if you haven't been indicted and convic- ted of something." The reference was to Edwin Meese III, whose nomination is stalled pending a special prosecutor's investigation. Mondale said he would protect Social Security at all costs. "I know what these seniors are going through. They're living on nickles and dimes," said Mondale. "There are a lot of things we cannot afford, but I for one will not pick on old folks." He said the nation needs "sound new economic policies," and he vowed to pursue new policies "that will get those God-awful nuclear weapons under con- trol." The candidates were aiming their appeals at the Pennsylvania Democrats who will allocate the next big block of delegates - 172 - in their primary next Tuesday. Reagan s WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan and the Congressional Budget Office, whose conclusions he has at- tacked as something worse than EUROPE BY CAR b "blankety-blank lies," agree that his one Rockefeller Plaza tax-cut programs has provided propor- Phone (212) 581-3040 tionately more dollars to the wealthy Mail this ad for Special than to the poor. Student/Teacher Tariff. Reagan and the non-partisan resear- Q RENTAL Q LEASE Q PURCHASE chers on Capitol Hill also agree on the reason. That is, because about everybody gets the same percentage of THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB PATRICK GARDNER, DIRECTOR ANNUAL SPRING CONCERT Saturday, April 7, 1984 8:00 pm Hill Auditorium Tickets: $5, 4,3, $2 students Hill Box Office April 1-7 r / / f avs tax cute reduction in their income tax rate, it stands to reason that a person who pays more tax would get a greater dollar amount of a cut than one who pays less in tax. "I DON'T think there is a basic disagreement," Hy Sanders, a Congressional Budget Office tax analyst, said yesterday. "Those in the highest income groups received the largest tax cuts - in part because they had the highest tax liabilities to start with. We are talking about a tax cut everybody's rates across the board." At his news conference Wednesday night, Reagan was asked about a new CBO report which said the poorest people in America have lost more than they have gained from tax and spen- ding reductions recommended by the president since he took office in 1981. IS IT FAIR, Reagan was asked, that a family making less than $10,000 this year wil be about $400 worse off than it would have been without the president's program, while a family over the $80,000 level would be more than $8,000 better off? "It'not only wouldn't be fair but I don't think it's true," Reagan replied. s aid rich "You know, as Disraeli once said, there are lies, blankety-blank lies and statistics... "We havd a tax program that was a 25 percent cut across the board. Now that's a 25 percent reduc- tion in the tax burden of everyone. If you have someone whose tax burden is $20, that cut means they save $5 and they still owe $15. "BUT SOMEONE who ... pays 100 times as much tax, $2,000, gets $500 but still owes $1,500," the president con- tinued. "In other words, the progressivity of the tax programs stays the same, so there is no way that the tax programs could have benefited someone at one end of the scale and not the other. It's based on proportions." President Reagan is also trying to evade responsibility for the deaths' of 264 Americans in Lebanon and make Congress the scapegoat for his own failed policies, Democratic congressional leaders said yesteray. "I believe he has.qualms of conscien- ce," House Speaker Thomas O'Neill told reporters. "He is responsible for therdeaths of the Marines over there," the Massachusetts Democrat declared. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Saudi jet hijacked to Istanbul ANKARA, Turkey - A crack anti-terrorist police squad yesterday stormed a hijacked Saudi Arabian jet and freed all 277 passengers and crew. The Syrian hijacker and four other people were injured in the raid. The semiofficial Anatolia news agency said the plane was diverted during a flight from Jidda, Saudi Arabia, to the Syrian capital of Damascus. A 64-year-old woman passenger was seriously injured and two other women were hurt when they jumped from the exit doors of the Saudi Arabian Airlines jet to the tarmac at Istanbul'sYesilkoy airport. The plane's chief engineer hurt his hand, apparently in a fight with the hijacker, as the heavily armed anti-terrorist team rushed the forward section of the plane and disarmed the man in a dramatic seven-minute operaiton. The motive for the hijacking was not immediately known, but Turkey's national news agency UBA identified the man as Hidir Ahmet Mahlej, 25, of Damascus. He was ordered held in custody until Friday morning. India takes 'emergency powers AMRITSAR, India - Faced with mounting Sikh violence, the Indian government armed itself yesterday with emergency powers to jail suspected terrorists without trial for as long as two years in Punjab state. Militant Fikh leader Jarnail Fingh Bhindranwale told 40 supporters at the holy Golden Temple, "The government either wants to eliminate the Sikhs or wants the Sikhs to lick the dust of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's slippers." He said the govrernment and police were conspiring to kill innocent Sikhs, and that paramilitay officers who killed six Sikhs during a riot Tuesday must be repaid in kind. Bhindranwale asked his followers to form motorcyle-riding squads in every Punjab village to "go out and teach lessons" to the government. Motorcycles have been used often in the hundreds of hit-and-run killings in Punjab in the past three years. "The Sikhs should realize their existence is threatened, and should face the challenge," Bhindranwale said. "Every village should have one motorcycle and three armed and trained Sikh riders to go out and teach lessons and repay the government." FBI hunts for wanted fugitive WASHINGTON - The FBI began an extraordinary nationwide manhunt yesterday for Christopher Wilder, a 39-year-old race car driver charged with kidnapping one woman and suspected in the death or disappearance of six others from Florida to Nevada. The FBI called an unusual news conference to say Wilder had been added to its "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list and appealed for help from the public in catching him. "We don't normally do this," said Assistant FBI Director Oliver "Buck' Revell of the news conference. "But he represents a significant danger. He's extremely active, very dangerous, and this approach may lead to his apprehension. He's making contacts on an almost daily basis, and this is potentially a very prolific situation." He added that if Wilder were responsible for all the cases "it would be a classic case of sexual, serial murders," a type of crime that has drawn increasing attention this year from federal officials, because the murders often take place so far apart that they cannot be connected by local authorities. Revell said every FBI office in the nation had been assigned tasks in the case "to ensure full coverage." He said the FBI had no information on Wilder's whereabouts since Sunday, when he was spotted in Las Vegas, Nev. Two killers executed in South Arthur Goode III, killer of two small boys, died crying in Florida's electric chair yesterday less than six hours after Louisiana executed Elmo Patrick Sonnier. It was the first time two men have been put to death onithe same day since the Supreme Court lifted its ban on capital punishment in 1976. The electrocutions brought to 18 the number of condemned prisoners executed since 1976. Eleven of those executions have taken place in Southern prisons. Goode was the fourth to be electrocuted in Florida since 1976; no other state has held more than three executions. Goode, 30, who had said earlier he would "kill as many kids as I can get my hands on" if he was set free, repented in his final tearful seconds before the death hood was dropped over his face. Sonnier, 35, convicted of raping a teenaged girl and then killing her and her boyfriend, looked into the eyes of his victims' fathers as he was strapped into the chair in Angola prison and begged their forgiveness. Prime lending rate rises .5% NEW YORK - The nation's major banks yesterday boosted their prime lending rate for business loans to 12 percent from 11 percent, the highest level in more than a year and one that could quickly affect the sizzling mortgage market, First National Bank of Chicago took the lead and was immediately followed by Pittsburgh's Mellon Bank, Citibank, Chase Manhattan, Morgan Guaranty Trust and Chemical Bank. Most of the nation's major banks then fell in line with the higher rate. It was the highest level for the prime rate since November 1982 when banks lowered the prime to 11% percent from 12 percent. An influential economist predicted the prime would rise to 13 percent by early summer because of Federal Reserve pressure on bank reserves, and he said consumers would be more quickly and more directly affected than in the past. Officials delay code vote until students return in fall (Continued from Page 1) ber. The regents would likely vote on the code in October. The statement said that Kennedy was speaking on behalf of University President Harold Shapiro, who is out of town until Monday. Originally, administrators had hoped to have a proposed code ready to go before the regents at this month's meeting. But considerable opposition to several sections of the code has forced officials to spend more time than they expected revising the code and listening to criticism. MANY STUDENTS who oppose the proposed code have expressed fears that the regents might take action on the code when students are away for summer vacation. Kennedy said that the regents would also put off considering amending their bylaw 7.02 which says that the Michigan Student Assembly and faculty Senate Assembly must approve the code before it can be passed. Several regents and administrators have said they may be willing to con- sider changing the bylaw to side-step student opposition to the proposed code. - Claudia Green rzGRAND OPENING ASRITE WAY ONE WEEK CASH REGISTERS *COMPUTERS ONLY YOUR ONE STOP MARKETPLACE PR1IL 2 Zy FOR ALL YOUR COMPUTER NEEDS. tit"N IB Compatile S 1 F SHARP 7/rfwf .NIGH PERFORMANCE FLOPPY DISK i DATA PRODUCTS, INC. LEADING EDGE: SAVE BIG ON ALL SOFTWARE £ HARDWARE MONITORS DISK DRIVES PRINTERS QEEUA COMPUTER COROIAUON 5%A" Diskettes for popular personal computers. SOFTWARE&RHARDWARE FOR A APPLE ATARI[ (C- J1e 80 l~ ~,1984 June S - ugus Lagug Workhop To obtain a free copy of the S full infTr Ssson Bu-llet, 0tiing fl rite ination and an application, call or wre Summer SeSSionl 22 Wheeler Hall Telephone: LTC Berkeley-415>2 Berkeley, CA 94720 Name AddreSs be flidjitgan Dafl Friday, April 6, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 149 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. 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