Page 2 University Daily Kansan, March 8, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Reagan rests in California while budget support falters WASHINGTON—While President Reagan relaxed at his hideaway in California's Santa Ynez Mountains, strolling around Lake Kuching and driving his new red lawmower with the presidential seal, the last organized support for his proposed 1983 budget fell apart. Jumping off the Reaconism team in the past week were almost all the national business associations that conducted successful grassroots lobbying for his program last year. They objected to the size of his defense increases and defends but did not agree on what should be done instead. Earlier defectors included the Southern Democratic Boll Weevils and Republican leaders of Congress, who already were meeting on Capitol Hill to try to draw up an alternative. Reagan refused to join in the process of developing a new plan. Meanwhile, Sen. Pete Domicii, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said yesterday that the congressional alternative budget would likely cut defense spending and make tax code changes in order to make up for a swelling deficit. Domenici, R-N-M., stressed that Congress would look to cutting back regular increases in entitlement programs, such as Social Security, in a bid to control the deficit, which he said could be as high as $180 billion next year. Speak up! Speak up! He deputy press secretary, the president will hold him in his conviction for spending and a stronger military force are an essential part of his budget. suffer humiliation or you are an essential part of it. The President has not budged. "Speaks said Spokes 'statement followed a number of reports by top presidential aides that indicated Reagan would allow for some military cuts under certain conditions.' Guatemalans defy guerrillas, vote GUATEMALA CITY—Guatemalans defended guerrilla threats yesterday and went to the polls in heavy numbers to elect a new president amid promises of a boost in U.S. military aid if the elections were handled fairly, Guatemalan authorities said. Midday lines were backed up for two blocks in most polling places in the capital and officials in other cities said the turnover was heavier than ex-ordinary voters. Observers said the long lines at the booths indicated voters believed their choice for president would be respected by the military-dominated government, which is eager for U.S. arms aid to combat the growing guerrilla movement. U. S. officials said they did not care who won the election, as long as the winner was chosen in "clean and free" elections promised by President Romeo Lucas Garcia. Garcia took power in 1978 after an alleged fraudulent vote. "The carrot is better relations," said Richard Graham, U.S. embassy political attachhe. He indicated Guatemala could expect a boost in U.S. military aid to fight Marxist-led guerrillas who are gaining strength in the Western highlands. Father sought in shooting of sons EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio--Police hunted yesterday for a suburban Cleveland man wanted for the slayings of his three sons, found shot to death The bodies of Reginaal Brooks Jr., 17, and his brothers, Vaughn, 15, and Narchos, 11, were found Saturday by their mother. Beverly, when she knew the body Police said all three victims had been shot once in the head and were still in their beds in the downstairs bedroom they shared. Unriends and neighbors said the boy's father, Reginald Sr., had been friends for several years and the couple might have been in the process of getting a divorce. Police issued an all-points bulletin for Brooks Saturday night, describing him as a suspect in the shootings. A neighbor in the upstairs apartment, Vicky Hays, said she heard what might have been gunshots from the downstairs apartment between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. Hotel may face fire code charges HOUSTON—The Westchase Hilton may be cited for code violations in Saturday's $1 million blaze that killed 10 people and injured 30 others after a desk clerk repeatedly silenced an alarm that would have alerted sleeping guests, the fire marshal said yesterday. Fire Marshal Eddie Corral said misdemeanor charges could be filed against the hotel's management for failing to properly train employees to handle emergencies. Fire officials said a cigarette carelessly disposed of in a chair or bed in a fourth-floor room may have started the fire, when more than 200 guests were registered at the hotel. But Corral said an official cause hasn't been determined yet. Hôtel Clerk James Harvey told officials that the fire alarm went in the hotel's office, but he repeatedly turned it off, not knowing that it would sound. By turning off the alarm, the clerk also reactivated the hotel's ventilation system, which circulated smoke and soot throughout the building, officials U.S. supplying aid to Iranian exiles WASHINGTON—The United States, in an effort to counter Soviet influence in Iran, is spending millions of dollars to secretly aid Iranian planning efforts. The Times said the effort was reportedly being run by the CIA and was aimed at knitting together a coalition of exile and paramilitary groups and their supporters in Iran, who are opposed to the Moslem fundamentalist regime that is now in power. The newspaper sources said, however, that the CIA had not had success in persuading the factions to work together and that the groups were at least as interested in destroying each other as they were in destroying the Moslem regime. **Regime.** According to the Times, the United States is trying to gain influence with the groups that could someday play a significant role in their turbulent homeland. Cause of Belushi's death unknown HOLLYWOOD - Coroners will run more tests to determine the cause of actor-coroner John Belushi's death, and there was no indication from the authorities that a suicide attempt occurred. The 33-year-old star of television's original "Saturday Night Live," and several movies, including "Animal House," "The Blues Brothers" and "Neighbors," was found dead shortly after noon Friday in the $200-a-day hotel bungalow he had rented while working on a movie script. Coroner Thomas Noguchi, who had come under criticism in his handling of announcements on the deaths of Natalie Wood and William Holden, said Bellush's cause of death was not immediately established by the autopsy. Other information would be released until follow-up tests were completed. The Screen Actors Guild had accused Noguchi of sensationalizing the deaths of Holden and Wood. A spokesman for the coroner's office said Belusli did not die of a heart attack or choking as first thought. Those conditions would have been ap- pared. Dohrn sees yesterdays in today Her blue eyes looked questioning, almost self-conscious, as if she were trying to figure out why all these reporters had come to see her. By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Bernadine Dohrn. A name from the past, almost forgotten and unknown by many students today. "I didn't know there were going to be so many people here," she said softly, squinting into the glaring television lights. At her other two appearances Friday, like the press conference, the crowds were there. The people wanted to hear what they were saying. Weather Underground, one of the most radical terrorist groups of the '60s, the people wanted to hear the social activist talk about her involvement in the war and find out what her plans are today. The people wanted to tell her what their thoughts were on the issues of war, nuclear proliferation, racism, and what they think should be done today. She opened both of the public sessions with short statements, but was more interested in the discussion. And she obliged on all points. Her central message was about U.S. involvement in El Salvador. "I am here because the U.S. government is at war today," she told the overflow crowd in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. "I think the situation now has analgesics to the 78%," she said, noting that the government was preparing for the withdrawal of the defense budget and weaponry. She said she saw direct parallels between the war in Vietnam and what was honeymoon today in El Salvador. The administration is relying upon the American people's general apathy and their despair with the economic situation in the United States to not be concerned with the U.S. involvement in El Salvador. Dohrm said. "People will go along with the government as long as little or no American blood is being spilled," she said. In the '60s, Dohrm was a central figure in the vanguard group of the anti-war movement, Students for a Democratic Society. Her own political activism started in 1960, when she was a freshman at the University of Chicago. She was from a middle-class Midwestern family, "exited and in love with the academic life." Her first bit of activism was becoming involved in a network to arrange abortions, which were then illegal. She called her subsequent activities, such as fighting for black liberation and protesting against the war, "hinks in you because your becoming even more of an activist. Simply because students didn't experience the turmoil of the 90s, she said, is no reason that they cannot become involved today. Her intentions now are to be an organizer, to help people teach themselves about problems in the states and what they can do individually. She said a lot of the tactics used by the anti-war movement could be employed today. She said organizing teach-ins, publishing fact sheets, writing to congressmen and generally raising awareness about the issues we wade to become involved. But she spoke of the inconsistencies in American life, of racism and sexism, of threats to the daily lives of minorities and of oppression. She spoke of abuse in a moderate, but emphatic tone. "I am not a spokesman for the left," she said. She listened intently to the questions, with apparent concern for the comments others made, acknowledging mother's knowledge in a particular area. She could have been any 40-year-old woman talking about the problems in the world. But this mother of three has been on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List, was considered "armed and wanted" and lived underground for 10 years. Those 10 years changed her some but also re-inforced a lot of her beliefs. She said she went through many cycles during those years underground. She lived, as Lou Douglas,$^14$ with William Avers, in New York City. She said they tried to "embrace the youth movement, the hippie movement," and later went on to read Marks and Lenin. She came out of hiding for "personal reasons," but she still seemed wanted to be politically active again. She said most of her time has been consumed with being a mother. She also works now as a waitress and as a law clerk. She has not done too much public work, saying that she spoke to some campus groups last October and now at KU. She said she was eligible to take the Not quite the same person who was quoted by Esquire magazine in 1970 as saying, "We're being crazy motherhood," and scared to scare the slut out of Hong America." New York Bar exam, "strangely, ironically enough." She seemed almost reluctant to talk about her former life with the Weather Underground, more out of concern that it would become the focal point of people's interest rather than the work she is trying to do today. She defended the organization's activities but admitted there were mistakes made. "Those of us who participated in the anti-war movement were not drastic enough," she said. The Weathermen became famous through their bombing escapades. They were responsible for bombs going off on campuses and in other public buildings. Two of their legion were killed when a "bomb factory" in a New York City brownstone blew up in 1970. "Resorting to violence is painful and tragic," Dohrn said, "but with a slave/master situation something has to be done." Dohrm went underground in 1979 after the Days of Rage in Chicago, which resulted in her being charged with aggrigated battery and tumbling bail. Those charges were dropped in 1979. After she surfaced in December 1980, she was fined $1,500 and placed on three years probation. History is being re-written today, she said, so that it looks as if most people were against the war in Vietnam. But she said that only at the height of the war did Americans believe the United States was losing the war did most people come out against the war. Because of that, people do not believe an easily what the government says it is because it doesn't. Despite the changes that have occurred in American society in the past two decades, Dohn said that the rise of the Ku Klux Klan and the increase in police shootings of black youth pointed to a real racism was even more prevalent today. Dohr said that today 70 to 75 percent of the prison population was of minorities and Third World people as Bernadine Dohrn opposed to the '50s when it was primarily a white population. "The only affirmative domestic program today is to build prisons," she said. Speaking of women, Dohrn said the Reagan administration was trying to put women back in their roles of 15 years ago. She said that with the budget cuts had come reductions in rape crisis centers, shelters for battered women and day care centers. She called the U.S. government the "main enemy of the people of the world", and said that Americans were from the communities of the world. "We are taught not to identify with people around the world, people of another color." she said. By the end of the day, Dohrn looked worn and tired. Yet she still stood and talked to students, listening to what they wanted to do and offering advice on how they could be effective in world affairs. One man complimented her on not being shell or degrading or offering a leather bag. Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-733 "I compliment you on being able to talke to people,"he said. Thank you," she said. 8th Anniversary Specials Head Into with Style... off Haircuts off Perms — expires March 20 — Offer valid with coupon only Help celebrate our 8th anniversary by taking advantage of this coupon. 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