1fge 4-Thursday June 10,1982-The-MichiganDaily Reagan proposes trOOrPC U' nt01S troop reductions in Europe BONN, West German (AP) - President Reagan proposed yesterday that NATO and the Soviet bloc make substantial reductions in their European forces - to 700,000 ground troops each - and told peace demon- strators massing in Germany that "my heart is with you." The president got a standing ovation from the Bundestag, the lower house of West Germany's parliament, after a televised speech in which he declared that "the American committment to Europe remains steady and strong," particularly in Germany. "EUROPE'S shores are our shores. Europe's borders are our borders. We will stand with you in defense of our heritage of liberty and dignity," he said on the eve of a 16-nation NATO summit meeting here. "We are with you, Germany. You're not alone," Reagan said a few hours af- ter arriving from a two-day visit to England and a private meeting with West German Chancellor Helmut Sch- midt. As tens of thousands of protesters gathered in Bonn and West Berlin to protest the U.S. military buildup and plans to installnew intermediate-range missiles in Europe next year, the president said: "To those who march for peace, my heart is with you. I would be at the head of your parade if I believed marching alone could bring about a more secure world..,. I understand your genuine concerns.' WHILE REAGAN was speaking, an Brown, eFer primary e1o From the Associated Pres Voters in Ohio punished a Democratic congressman for suppor- ting President Reagan's economic policies while California Senate can- didates Edmund Brown Jr. and Pete Wilson, fresh from primary victories, declared themselves eager to debate their considerable differences. "I am going to smoke him out," Governor Brown said of the San Diego mayor who hopes to frustrate Brown's move to Washington. "He ducked novelist Gore Vidal but he will not escape Pete Wilson," the mayor said. TUESDAY'S 10 state primary elec- tions thrust a number of fascinating politicians into the 1982 campaign limelight. Brown vs. Wilson, perhaps the most interesting match-up to emerge from Tuesday's primary elections. Brown defeated Vidal and another candidate. Wilson had to survive a large field, in- cluding two congressmen and a presidential daughter. Yesterday they agreed on only one point. they both wanted to debate. Brown challenged Wilson, within an hour, Wilson agreed. + Millicent Fenwick, the New Jersey congresswoman who is a model for Reagan ... proposes troop reductions air raid siren wailed outside for nearly a half-hour. Unsigned letters received later by news organizations said in German that anti Reagan activists had triggered the siren because Reagan mean "danger of war" and "open sup- port for military dictatorship." In a speech he described as "a major step toward a safer Europe for both East and West," the president announ- ced NATO leaders had agreed to propose that the opposing alliances "reduce their respective ground force personnel in verifiable stages to a total of 700,000 men, and their combined ground and air force personnel' to a level of 900,000 men." iwick/ain ections Doonesbury's Lacey Davenport, will duel businessman Frank Lautenberg. He is already working to tar her with the brush of Reaganomics. If Mrs. Fenwick wins, she would be the third woman in the Senate. IN A SHOWCASE primary, Mrs. Fenwick's individuality worked magic and the Republicans hoped she would join Kansan Nancy Kassebaum and Floridian Paula Hawkins as members of a legislative body long dominated by males. " Tom Bradley, the former policeman who is mayor of Los Angeles, will square off against law-and-order Attor- ney General George Deukmejian for the California governorship being vacated by Brown. If Bradley wins, he'd be the first black elected as a governor. " Roxanne Conlin, a 37-year-old former U.S. attorney, makes a race for gover- nor of Iowa against Lt. Gov. Terry Branstad. Correctioni In Thursday's Daily, the caption for the picture of Troupe Ta'Amullat in- correctly identified the dancers. They should have been identified as Nancy Goings, Mary Weed, and Cynthia Adams. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Budget battle continues today WASHINGTON- House Democrats and Republicans worked to rally their troops for today's battle of the budget as leaders of the two parties quietly discussed a possible fallback position in the event no plan wins approval. The order of combat was decided yesterday when the House Rules Com- mittee agreed to bring up the Democratic budget first, the Republican plan second and-if neither passes-to vote on President Reagan's original proposal. Both sides agreed the Republican plan had the best chance of passing and GOP leaders, aided by White House lobbyists, mounted a strong effort to persuade their party members to vote for it. Reagan, in Bonn, Germany, passed the word that he would support the Republican plan "as the best available alternative." Reagan's chief economist calls high interest rates a mystery WASHINGTON- Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, said yesterday that persistently high interest rates remain a mystery to the administration and that there is no indication when the recession will end. President Reagan's chief economist also conceded that the White House had privately projected in February, 1981 that a recession was on the way. Publicly, the administration was saying just the opposite, and it was October before Reagan acknowledged a downturn. His testimony to the Joint Economic Committee of Congress triggered an angry exchange with the panel's chairman, Rep. Henry Reuss (D-Wis.), who demanded to see the unpublished administration figures which on Feb. 18, 1981 predicted the recession that began months later. Rotary votes to prohibit racial restrictions in Alabama chapter DALLAS- Delegates to Rotary International's annual convention voted overwhelmingly yesterday to prohibit racial restrictions on membership, reacting to an Alabama chapter's rule allowing only whites to join. "The world now doubts the motives of Rotary," said the 850,000-member group's incoming president, Jiroji Mukasa of Japan. "We must act now to remove any doubt that Rotary believes in the equality of all mankind." The delegates inserted into the Rotary bylaws a section stating that no club may "limit membership in the club on the basis of race, color, creed or national origin." "To my mind, this is the greatest thing that has ever happened in Rotary," said Shadrach Mgawo Nyabam of Nigeria, whose country was represented by a delegation of 546 members. "It was fantastic to hear the vote." More storms blast Midwest Storms blasted through the Midwest with 100-mph winds yesterday firinga broadside of tornadoes and torrents of rain that sent rivers gushing over their banks into towns and cities. Hundreds fled the floodwaters in Kansas and Missouri as thunderstorms which have pounded the plains off-and-on since early May renewed an assault with 8-inch rains and hail the size of baseballs. Thousands of homes and businesses lost power in Kansas City and other towns such as Moberly, Mo., where winds clocked at 100 mph snapped trees and power lines. Police in Rossville, Kan., pleaded for volunteers with boats and four-wheel drive vehicles to help evacuate most of the town's 1,100 residents, including about 70 patients at a nursing home. The sheriff's office in the northeast Kansas town, about 20 miles northwest of Topeka, said Cross Creek,normally a narrow stream winding through the community, had spread two miles wide upstream and was expected to crest 2 feet higher than a record level reached in 1973. The National Weather Service posted flash flood warnings along numerous rivers and streams in Kansas and Missouri, with the Missouri River already 2 feet over flood stage at Boonville, Mo., and some tributaries expected to surge 8 feet over their banks. Hinckley changed his story, psychiatrist testifies WASHINGTON - John Hinckley changed his story just two weeks before his trial began, saying he believed President Reagan "stood in the way" of his union with actress Jodie Foster, a doctor testified yesterday. In the second day of sharp cross-examination by defense lawyers, prosecution psychiatrist Park Dietz stuck to his assertion that Hinckley was not mentally ill when he shot Reagan March 30, 1981. Dietz, his voice rising under questioning, said he had asked Hinckley a year ago whether he viewed the president as an obstacle to attaining Foster, and Hinckley "said never did Reagan stand in his way." The witness repeatedly rejected suggestions that Hinckley was driven to the crime by his fantasies and by obsessions about building a romance with Miss Foster, who played a young prostitute in the movie "Taxi Driver." Instead, the doctor portrayed the 27-yar-old defendant as a manipulator who concocted stories to support his insanity defense.