The Michigan Daly Vol. XCI, No. 3-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 8, 1981 FREE ISSUE Twenty Pages 7House M:approves eagan budget From AP and UPI silently and a packed gallery watched WASHINGTON - The House defied intently. WASHNGTN -The ous deied "You close the door on America" its Democratic leaders yesterday and when voting for the Reagan-backed bill, approved President Reagan's austerity he declared. budget, endorsing a historic rollback of But Rep. Phil Gramm of Texas, a social programs that started with the conservative Democrat instrumental in New Deal R lining up votes to pass the plan, said, House Republicans voted "We're asking that America's unanimously for the $688.8 bilihon traditional economic and political budget, and 63 Democrats joined them values be allowed to work again." in the 253-176 vote despite the emotional AND REP. BOB MICHEL of Illinois, pleas of their leaders to save the the Republican leader, said, "Let programs "that made America great." history record that we provided the It was the finest legislative hour to margin of difference that changed the date for Reagan, who had lobbied in- course of American government." tensively to get his measure through Although the Democrats hold a the one chamber where Democrats majority of 241-190, it was clear in days have numerical control. leading up to the vote that- the House CONSERVATIVE Democrats was ready to back a president whose aligned with a rock-solid Republican popularity, already high, soared in the minority to choose Reagan's austerity days following a March 30 spending plan for 1982 over an alter- aysiaongterpt. native backed by the Democratic assassination attempt leadership. O'Neill conceded Democratic defec- Final passage, a mere formality, was tions would be "extremely high," and virtually assured later in the day. . suggested Reagan might win by 90 Opponents of the president's proposal votes ina House where Democrats have assailed it to the end. a 51-seat majority. The margin, as it "DO YOU WANT TO meat-ax the turned out, was 77 on the most critical programs that made American great, tally. or do you want to go slow in correcting "The deficit is the Reagan deficit. In- the errors of the past?" Speaker terest rates . - . are the Reagan interest Thomas P. O'Neill (D-Mass) said as he rates. Inflation, which economists tell concluded debate in a chamber where us is going to soar, is the Reagan in- hundreds of congressmen listened flation," O'Neill said. Escorted to cemetery Escorted by masked riflemen of the Irish Republican Army, the body of hunger striker Bobby Sands is carried through a mass of spectators near his Belfast home yesterday. "He symbolizesthe Irish nation which has never surrendered and never will," said a spokesman. See Story, Page 6. Milliken oks college fundin LANSING (UPI) - Gov. William Milliken signed into law yesterday a bill boosting aid for Michigan's hard- pressed colleges and universities by about 12 percent in the coming fiscal year. The $716.5 million higher education budget for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 makes up for cuts of about 5 per- cent imposed under the current austere budget. It is up from a total of $635.3 million this year. COLLEGES ACROSS THE state have been forced to raise tuition and cutback academic programs. Michigan State University, perhaps the hardest hit, is considering laying off as many as 100 tenured professors in a rare belt- tightening step. MSU, Michigan's largest university, will. receive $154.2 million under the budget. The arch-rival University of Michigan, the second-largest college, also will get about $154.2 million. The state police budget for 1981-82, which also funds the Department of Military Affairs, totals $144 million, up from $123.7 million in the current fiscal year. THE GOVERNOR vetoed funding for the $1.2 million, state-federal Operation CARE. Milliken said the holiday high- way safety program may be eliminated from the federal budget and the state should not commit its $352,500 share of the cost without closer evaluation of the project's merit. See MILLIKEN, Page 15 Anton