Page 12--Wednesday, May 13, 1981-The Michigan Daily 4 Social WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan proposed yesterday a Social Security overhaul which would slash benefits by $46.4 billion over the next five years, lower the payroll taxes paid by workers and employers, and penalize early retirees by an average of $126 monthly. The plan also would make. it much more difficult to qualify for disability payments by eliminating age and other non-medical factors from the ap- plication standards and requiring any recipient to have worked seven and one- half - rather than five - of the preyious 10 years. DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL Chair- man Charles Mannatt declared that "Ronald Reagan took out a large pair of Security scissors and cut a tremendous hole in the 'safety net' that he promised all Americans.. . Let him explain to senior citizens all over this country why he will not stand by his words." But Richard Schweiker, secretary of Health and Human Services, declared: "You've got to remember one thing. The fund is going broke ... We're trying to keep the old lady from having no check at all." The administration already has asked Congress to cut $35.5 billion in Social Security benefits by 1986 by wiping out the $122-a-month minimum benefit, aid to college students and the $255 lump sum death benefit, as well as placing tighter caps on disability, benefits. cuts outlined ADMINISTRATION officials said the cuts would solve both the short-term, and long-term fiscal crises clouding Social Security's future. The system now is running a projected 75-year deficit averaging $19 billion annually. The Reagan reforms would also deny dependents' benefits to the children of early retirees; eliminate "windfall" benefits for government workers and others who draw pension for work not covered by Social Security; and make workers and employers pay tax on the first six months of sick pay. However the president also offered a sweetener to the elderly. He wants to scrap by 1986 the restrictions on how much those 65 to 71 can earn without losing Social Security benefits. The package also envisions giving workers a break by holding down payroll tax in- creases scheduled over the next decade. THE CURRENT PAYROLL tax of 6.65 percent is scheduled to rise to 6.7 percent in 1982, 7.05 percent in 1985, 7.15 percent in 1986 and 7.65 percent in 1990. The Reagan package envisions lowering the tax when the Social Security trust funds build back up to 50 percent of one year's benefits, a level the president hopes to achieve by 1990. Officials said the payroll tax could be held to 6.95 percent in 1985 and 7.05 per- cent in 1986, then cut to 6.45 percent in 1990. It would have to be hiked to 7.55 percent in 2020. Explosion inures 27 4-H'ers, 8 critically DE WITT, Iowa (AP) - An explosion and fire that ripped through a far- mhouse crowded with young 4-H mem, bers gutted the interior and injured 27 people, authorities said, and eight of them were still in critical condition yesterday. The cause of the blast had not been of- ficially determined, but officials speculated it occurred when the owner of the house, Donald Burzlaff, tried to light a propane gas furnace in the basement. "IT WAS A TRUE disaster," said Dr. Duane Wilkins of Jackson County Hospital in nearby Maquoketa, where 17 of the injured were taken. Ten other people were treated at De Witt Com- munity Hospital. Thirty-two people were in the home in Bliedhorn, northwest of De Witt, when the explosion occurred, and all have been accounted for, said Grand Mound Fire Chief Meryl Haack. Neighbors rushed the injured to hospitals in cars before firefighters arrived. Officials said the group gathered Monday at the farmhouse for the mon- thly meeting of the Grant Modern Far- mers 4-H Club. CLINTON COUNTY Sherif's Sgt. Larry Greenwalt arrived 12 minutes af- ter the explosion. "The northeast cor- ner of the house was in flames," he said. "A piece of the house was blown out on the driveway." Firefighter Joseph Collum said the blaze gutted the house, adding "I don't know how, but somehow they got everybody out of there." He gave much of the credit to two of the three sons of Burzlaff and his wife, Betty, saying they pulled many of the injured from the burning two-story house. The Burzlaffs were among those critically injured. Eight of the injured were transferred to University Hospitals in Iowa City and were reported in critical condition yesterday. They were being treated at the hospitals' burn center. Another four were transferred from the Maquoketa hospital to Franciscan Hospital in Romkjsland, Ill., were one was reported in critical condition. 4 4 4 E Presidential duties Socialist President-elect Francois Mitterrand greets French citizens in a Parisian neighborhood yesterday. The French stock market has erupted sn panic selling in anticipation of new leftist policies. See story, page 2. Wake up to Tiie 1idtiign Bai t All Summer Long... Spring-Summer Subscriptionsl $6.50 in Ann Arbor $7.00 by mil outside of Ann Arbor Single term Subscriptions (Spring or Summer) $3.50 in Ann Arbor $4.00 by mail outside of Ann Arbor For more information, call 764-0558 or come by 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI. 48109 (Have a super summer) a a a