Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Federal Reserve head says large deficit to stall recover NEW YORK—The president's chief economic adviser predicted yesterday that the worst of the recession would end by late March, but Paul Volcker, Federal Reserve Board chairman, warned that large budget deficits would stall recovery. Speaking to a conference board meeting of about 1,000 business executives, Vanderuerg urged Congress to make even deeper cuts in government spending. He warned that large deficits could conflict with the Fed's fight against inflation, which involved monetary growth targets that he admitted posed a risk. Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, asserted in an earlier speech that the projected deficits, when measured relative to the size of the entire economy, were not as large as in 1976 and would not force interest rates up or abort the expected recovery. Although President Reagan has backed off from projecting a timetable for recovery, Weidenbaum predicted that the first quarter would prove "the bottom of recession," with increasing signs of an upturn during the April-June period. Accused killer found incompetent KANSAS CITY, Kan.-The man charged in the death of two people gunned down in the University of Kansas Medical Center's emergency room was declared incompetent to stand trial yesterday and was ordered to receive more treatment at a state mental hospital. in the Lee J. Moroney, Wyndgate County administrative judge, said that he supported Larned State Hospital's funeral service this month found son of a resident to stand in court. troom is charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the March 20, 1981, shootout playoff. In 1983, a 25-year-old resident at the troom was arrested and a hospital visit hospital, and the receiver. The judge ordered that Boan be returned to Lared State Hospital for more treatment and evaluation for a period not to exceed 90 days, after which another competency hearing will be held in district court. Testimony ends in Williams trial **ALIANA** - Testimony ended yesterday in the murder trial of Wayne B. Williams, mother insisting that prosecutors failed to prove her son killed by her brother. "Wayne's character has been drug through the mud, his daddy's character has been drug through the mud and I been drug," Williams' mother, Faye, testified. "In fact they have ruined the Williams family and they lie to lie and, but they have not produced evidence my son is a The defendant's 64-year-old mother was the last witness in the 9-week-long trial. The case should go to the jury today. Following, Mrs. Williams' testimony, defense attorney Al Binder moved for a directed verdict of acquittal, but the motion was denied. Leaders laud Caribbean aid plan SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico—most Caribbean and Central American leaders lauded President Reagan's Basin initiative yesterday, and four prime ministers said they would meet with Reagan in April to stress their specific needs. Reagan unveiled his long-awaited initiative, which includes a proposal for about $300 million in aid in an address Wednesday to Washington-based unions. However, the State Department said Nicaragua would not benefit from the aid plan unless it changes its foreign and domestic policies. Otto Reich, administrator for Latin America of the State Department's Agency for International Development, also indicated that panel that discussed the potential for the agency to be not lifed. Committee cites Watt for contempt WASHINGTON—The House Energy Committee voted yesterday to cite Interior Secretary James Watt for contempt of Congress for refusing to provide 11 subpoenaed documents for which President Reagan has claimed executive privilege. The resolution, introduced by Rep. Albert Gore Jr., D-Tenn., refers to the full House of Representatives Watt's refusal to comply with a Sept. 18, 2001 resolution. The issue arose when a House oversight subcommittee subpoenaed 31 documents in an effort to learn whether Canada's new energy policy discriminates against American investments, and Watt's reluctance to bar Canadian firms from U.S. oil leases in retaliation. Hasty action by the House appears unlikely. Congressional aides said it could take weeks simply to prepare the report for the House. could take a week simply to prepare the letter for the envelope. Watt has said he was willing to go to jail for the principle. Asner says remarks' style 'a goof' HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — An unrepetent Ed Aser admitted yesterday that he "goofed" in the style of his recent call for medical aid for leftist rebels in 2016. However, Asner stressed that he stood by the substance of his controversial remarks. "I feel I have an obligation of justice and human rights to speak on as civil servant," she said, playing a tough city editor on the new government series, told a new commentary. But Asner, president of the powerful Screen Actors Guild, said he erred when he failed to stress that he was speaking as a private citizen, not as president of the 55,000-member union. "It was a slight goof, an honest mistake," he said. Falwell hit by pies at convention FORT WORTH, Texas—Moral Majority leader the Rev Jerry Fallowell protested his stand against abortion by two nightly bjections by women protesting his stand against abortion. Police said the two women escaped a group of angry delegates attempting to forcibly remove them from Will Rogers Memorial Auditorium. One man was roughed up by more than a dozen delegates who surrounded the women, officers said. The women hurled the pies during Falwell's speech to the Bible Baptist Fellowship's annual convention. Police said Lawrence Bolman, 21, of Hurst, Texas, northeast of Fort Worth, was placed in protective custody after delegates pulled his hair, kicked and pinched him when he intervened between the delegates and the two women. Fawell declined to seek charges against the women. Legal question stalls Hinckley trial WASHINGTON - A federal judge yesterday set March 9 as the trial date for John Hinckley Jr. in his 1972 murder case, but within hours, an appeal court blocked the beginning of his trial. Acting at the request of federal prosecutors, a three-judge appellate panel postponed the trial at least until April 9 to give prosecutors time to decide whether to appeal an order barring the use of illegally obtained evidence at Hinckley's trial. The delay was a hint, but not firm evidence, that prosecutors will seek to win court approval to use contested statements made by Hinckley hours after President Reagan was shot nearly one year ago. Kansas telephone rate hike approved by KCC Because of the increase, customers also will have to reach for a quarter instead of a dime when making calls from a pay telephone. The KCC granted the 15-cent increase, saying the 10-cent rate had been in effect for almost 30 years. TOPEKA-Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. customers can expect to pay 95 cents more on monthly bills for basic service because the Kansas Corporation Commission decided yester- day Bell a Bell $4.67 million rate hike. However, the 25-cent rate can be use only on pay phones that Bell has converted to the 'Dial tone-first program', which allows customers to call and receive calls is only to make emergency calls or to charge local or long-distance calls. In deciding for the rate increase, the KCC sliced off a large chunk of the company's original request of $40.5 value from the balance granted. Granted Bell the full request, customers would have had to pay $3.70 more on monthly bills. 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