The Michigan Daily - Thursday, July 11, 1985-- Page 3 Michigan approves bill for Great Lakes LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - The Legislature yesterday approved bills designed to prevent water diversion from the Great Lakes. A bill, approved 89-1 by the House and 32-0 by the Senate, bans the diver- sion of Great Lakes waters from within Michigan's boundaries outside the Great Lakes basin. THE prohibition - which some doubt will be legally enforceable - does not apply to diversions in existence and it will last until one year after the submission of a comprehen- sive water management plan. That plan will be developed under separate legislation which the House approved 99-0 by the House and 34-0 by the Senate. That bill creates the Great Lakes and Water Resources Planning Com- mission charged with developing the management plan. THAT PLAN will include projec- tions of the future water needs of agriculture, industry, recreation, navigation, domestic consumption and ecosystems and a look at the economic and environmental impact of consumption, redistribution and diversion of water. It also will recommend legislation dealing with distribution of water resources among varous.competing users. Backers said the plan will strengthen the state's legal case against diversions. A third bill in the package, ap- proved 90-0 by the House and 35-0 by the Senate, alters the membership of Michigan's delegation to the Great Lakes compact commission and authorizes it to push for anti-diversion measures. Action on the Great Lakes bills had been delayed for some time by a series of unrelated political squab- bles. The Senate, on a 28-7 vote, sent to the House a measure hiking the bon- ding authority for the state building authority to $600 million from its current $400 million. Lawmakers said the $200 million increase is intended primarily for prison construction, but only if other sources of funds fall short. The Senate also approved and sent to the House legislation establishing priorities for $19.4 million in pur- chases during this budget year by the state's recreational land trust fund. The top priority is land in the Bridgman dunes area. Yum-yum Passers-by may find it hard to bypass the tempting treats in the window of Jacque's Patisserie yesterday. The new bakery is part of the new mini-mallon N. University. Congress agrees on deficit to offset social security WASHINGTON (UPI) - Congress- that would offset Social Security in- effort to alter the course of gover- $949.1 billion for fiscal 1986, which Pentagon can commit itself to spend ional budget negotiators and creases with more spending reduc- nment. begins Oct. 1. on long-term contracts, while outlays President Reagan agreed in a tions. O'Neill mentioned programs like Under the new framework, outlays represent actual spending for the sometimes testy session yesterday on Senate Budget Committee Chair- the Small Business Administration, for the Pentagon would be lowered $6 year. a framework for cutting the deficit man Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) said Amtrak, and federal revenue sharing billion to the House figure, but the Reagan and the conferees appeared Reagan and the conferees agreed as examples where deeper cuts might Defense Department would receive a toagree that a budget pian must be during a 75-minute meeting to a rein- be made. higher "budget authority" figure accepted by the House-Senate con- statement of all pension increases, The House budget totals $941.7 called for by the Senate. "Budget ference by the end of next week if a Iminor changes in military spending, billion, while the Senate version is Authority" refers to the amount the besses Aug. 2 for a month. no new taxes, and a redoubled effort to find other, unspecified savings. NOTES ASKED THE prospects of working Book possible for departing Stockman out a finished budget, Domenici repeated several times that he was Burglaries rep e skeptical. "We'll work at it," he told WASHINGTON (UPI) - David "plans to take a real crack at writing It was not Stockman's prepared Burg ported reporters. "But I don't think chances Stockman hopes to bid adieu to of- a book" during the three-month remarks so much as off-the-cuff A window was forced open at the are overwhelming to get it." ficial Washington in a time-honored hiatus. comments or candid interviews that Eden grocery at 330 Maynard St. late House Budget Committee Chair- way - in print - and a spokesman for "He has a number of publishing landed tenure him budget-cutter com- Monday night, and cash and an elec- man William Gray (D-Pa.) however, the departing budget director said houses who are dying to publish him," ment as chief -cer -rcom- tric juicer were reported stolen. The said the framework "gives me more yesterday several booksellers are Dale said. Reagans 1981 tax-cut plan a "Trojan burlary resulted in a loss of less than confidence" that a budget can be "dying to publish him." The book would be "a description of horse" to help the rich, or labeling the $1,400, police said. finished. Stockman, whose outspokenness this period . . . the nation's dilemma" military pension system "a scandal" Police believe a key was used to en- Late in the day, the House, by voice during 4 years as head of the Office over how to cope with staggering drew public and governmental atten- ter the Dunburi restaurant at 1215 S. vote, instructed its conferees to insist of Management and Budget sparked deficits, Dale said, adding: tion. State St. sometime after it closed July on preserving Social Security cost-of- numerous controversies, announced "He won't have any ghost writer. Stockman has made no public stawen an s o wn amournit csh yliving raises and require compen- Tuesday he would leave office Aug. 1. He's already got it blocked out in his 5, when an unknown amount of cash saton savings from other programs. HE PLANS to begin his new job as mind" statement since his resignation was was stolen. The burglary was not managing director with Salomon accepted Tuesday, and there is no reported until Monday, police said. BEFORE the White House session, Brothers, a Wall Street investment DC not h ' word on whether he would deliver a Golf clubs, a typewriter, and a radio with House conferee who firm, on Nov. 1. His spokesman, E n C o His aw spee h formal swan song. - valued at less than $1,100 - were aet win Dale, said that Stockman, 38. ,wrote hts ownspeeches. reported stolen from a home in the 800 are studying a total of $3 billion in ad- block of Lincoln sometime between ditional cuts, members said. With the W May 1land July 7 at 8 p.m., said Sgt. extra cuts, the House is aiming at" Jan Suomala of the Ann Arbor Police slicing $58 billion from an expected In d ia n f c i n i p t Department. 0 billion-plus deficit i fsa factions dispute m oney Waltstolen After seeing Reagan, Gray said Wallet those talks would continue, but he told WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Bureau of Indian Mfairs bill to allow the tribe to carry out its plan is "totally one- A wallet was reported stolen from a reporters, "There has been no announced its opposition yesterday to a plan by the sided." The other co-chair, Victoria Miller, said, "We feel student's purse in the Chemistry decision on where additional cuts will Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe to pool money from land wehave a right as descendants.., to a share of the awar- Building sometime between 5 and 7 be made." settlements and use it for investments. d ." p.m. Tuesday. The student left her Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass.) Descendants of tribal members also objected to the Ipayments going to enrolled members of the tribe and 3,243 purse on a desktop and when she said earlier the House conferees did pian ayingbis ould bebter to diti then on y e nts no enol members returned her wallet was gone, said not plan to eliminate any domestic per capita basis. Tribal leaders said pooling the money descendants who are not members. campus safety director Leo Heatley. programs, but, "We may make the would lead to improvements of the tribe's land near The tribe is backing a bill that would allow it to create Thetheftrultedina$391lss cuts a little deeper than the House MountPleasant, Mich. investment fund with mone from remaining land res originally proposed." "I think there's a lot of personal greed among descen- anwards. Income fd thund would be used for a number dante to get their share," _said Karl Funke, an advisor aad.Icm rmtefowudbuefranme working with the tribe, of things, from business development to health care and --Llaura Bizoff TE y o gNrAE budget scrans Paul Johnson, co-chair of a group of descendants, said a landacquisition,