Page 16 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, May 5, 1983 House panel slashes Salvador aid request WASHINGTON (AP) - A House ap- propriations panel slashed President Reagan's security-related foreign aid request by more than a third yesterday, denying or deferring funds for El Salvador and more than two dozen other countries. The foreign operations subcommittee approved 8-5 a supplemental ap- propriation measure granting $356.5 million in assistance for the current fiscal year to Lebanon, Costa Rica, Honduras and Thailand and $245 million for the International Develop- ment Association but eliminating other countries on the list. REP. CLARENCE Long (D-Md.) subcommittee chairman, said the ad- ministration's request for $50 million in military assitance to El Salvador, which is in the grip of a leftist rebellion, would be considered later, probably in a House-Senate conference committee. Last week, the subcommittee ap- proved half of a separate ad- ministration request to divert $60 million from military aid to other coun- tries and give it to El Salvador instead. The funds were approved on condition that the administration press for social reforms in El Salvador and a political settlement of the civil war. In view of this, said Long, "It would be a little too much for us to approve any more money right now." "THERE HAS to be more time so we can observe whether any progress is being made or not," he said. The administration submitted a sup- plemental request of $1.06 billion for military assistance grants and loans and security-related economic assistance during the current fiscal year. VOLUNTEER AT UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS Spring - Summer Terms Informational Meetings May 5 at 7 pm or May 9 at 4 pm Call 763-6710 for further information Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Mayor meets Mouse Mayor Louis Belcher presents Mickey Mouse with a key to the city. Mickey is in town to promote the new Disney channel on Ann Arbor Cablevision. Kids' bank EASTONMass. (AP)-A group of kids and a teacher who started a bank at school were learning a lot about high finance when the state decided to teach them a lesson about the law-by shut- ting them down. "The law is the law," said Robert Ledbetter, a state deputy banking commissioner, whose examiners closed the bank at Easton Middle School for not having a charter, among other things. The bank was started as a learning closed tool, teaching the children the rudimen- ts of finance by loaning out money for lunches and pocket cash. Borrowers were charged 8 percent interest a week with a maximum credit line of $1.50, twice the price of a day's hot lunch. But "the school has gone well beyond the banking statute," Ledbetter said. "Making loans at 8 percent runs about 400 percent per annum and that's in clear violation of the law. The bank was in violation." 4 It can handle just about anything. NASA bought it over the counter. You can too. Right Here. Come to Ulrich's Electronics and check out the HP-41. '' a ; . : ' >.: '. . :: ChP] WE 4 0 4