University Daily Kansan, October 11, 1984 CAMPUS AND AREA Page 11 House and Senate clear spending bill By United Press International WASHINGTON — House and Senate conferences cleared a major hurdle blocking adjournment of the 98th Congress last night, agreeing on a bill that would end Stevens, R.Alaska, said President Reagan would sign the package. The agreement, which breaks a deadlock over water projects and aid to Nicaraguaan rebels, was expected in the early days of the war in the night, and by the Senate today. The House and Senate also quickly passed and sent to Reagan one of the largest of the 13 regular appropriations bills, which covered the departments of Labor, Education and Health and Human Services and included current strict limits on use of federal funds for abortion. PASSAGE OF THE Labor-HHS bill, supported by Reagan, removed a major portion of what was to be included in the catchall spending bill. However, the bill that now totals about $700 billion still is needed to finance most federal agencies into the new year. House Democratic leader Jim Wright said earlier yesterday that the House hoped to stay into the night if necessary to await action by the negotiators on the continuing resolution and Senate action on a bill to raise the federal debt ceiling. But the Senate decided not to remain, dashing hopes for _adjournment yesterday. Conferences, after agreeing to deny any aid to anti-Sandinista rebels until at least March 1, and then provide $14 million only. "Congress votes to ban them later if they bygone by going further than the White House had wanted AT THE SUGGESTION OF chief Senate negotiator Mark Hatfield. R-Ore, conferees pulled 51 projects, and prompted administration wanted, out of the bill. Stevens said, "That is not a loss for the president and it's not a win for the president. It's a recognition that this is a presidential election year." Under the agreement worked out on Nicaragua and other defense issues, no money could be spent on aid to anti-Sandinista rebels until Congress voted in March to free $14 million from the rest of the fiscal year. That figure is half what the administration sought for the whole year. OTHER MAJOR ELEMENTS of the agreement included permission for three tests of a U.S. anti-satellite weapon next year, not to start before March; and a spending level of $1.4 billion for space weapons research. MIUWAKEE — Prosecutors said yesterday they would wait to see if a woman doused with gasoline and set afire was going to survive before they filed charges against her estranged husband. Sharon Brandt, 37, a beautician, was in critical condition at a Milwaukee hospital with third-degree burns over 95 percent of her body. She was surrounded by doctors said her chances of survival could not be determined. The district attorney's office said Brandt's husband, whose name was not released in accordance with Wisconsin law, would not be charged until her condition changed. Husband is arrested for setting wife afire By United Press International Bed," a Monday night TV movie about a battered wife who burned her husband to death. POLICE SAID THE man, 39, told them he had watched "The Burning Neighbors said say they could see tension building between the couple in the weeks after the husband left Brendt and Brandt began dating another man. Gerald Baade Sr., who said he was the husband's closest friend and got him a job three weeks ago, said the man was becoming more and more desperate to patch up the marriage HE KEPT HOPING AND praying that he could sneak back in, but she kept rejecting him. "Baade said. 'I think he meant just to show her what he could do to her, to scare her. If she would have given up, he would have gave her. Then he would have because. Because he worships the ground she walks on." Infant celebrates birthday after court fights, surgery THURS.OCT.11 LAW.MEMORIAL HOSP. AMERICAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION THE NEWLYWED COUPLE became embroiled in a national debate when a lawyer sought state intervention to force surgery and the federal government sued for access to medical records to see if Keri-Lynn was getting adequate care. By United Press International Based on doctors' reports that Keri-Lynn would live a life of pain even after surgery, her parents, Dan, 31, and Linda, 24, who ask that their last name be registered in operations to close the opening on Keri-Lynn's spine and to implant a shunt to drain fluid from her skull. Five months after Keri-Lynn's birth at University Hospital in Stony Brook, N.Y., on Oct 11, 1983. Dan and Linda allowed the shunt operation for their spina bifida child — and her spine closed naturally. NEW YORK — Keri Lynn, known to the world as Baby Jane Doe, was born with an open spine, fluid on the brain and a life of endless exploration. She celebrates her first birthday today a smiling, playful little girl For the first few months of her life, Keri I. Lym was the object of a right-to-life campaign to force surgery after her parents refused two operations to extend her life expectancy from two to 20 years Both court efforts ultimately failed. In seeming defiance against a year of public scrapping by the federal government, the medical profession, the media and the courts. Kery-Lynn turns one today at her Long Island home. DR. ANN MCBRIDE CONTRACEPTION FOR DIABETICS LADIES Take advantage of the student discount at Foxy Fingers. A new set of SCULPTURED NAILS... $27.50 FILL...$13.50 MANICURE...$4.00 call for appl. 843-7152 UNSIGHTLY HAIR???? 19 W. 19th St. Foxy Fingers Permanent Hair Removal THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO See our coupon in the Lawrence Book Call for an appointment 745 New Hampshire 841-5796 745 New Hampshire 841-5796 VACATIONS Steamboat PRE CHRISTMAS 2.5 NIGHT PACKAGES $74 NEW YEARS EVE 2 NIGHT PACKAGES $155 MORE POWDER 2 NIGHT PACKAGES $155 Use Kansan Classified. Oct. 11th Oct. 11th National Blues Recording Artist Smokey Logg & The Dust Devils Friday. Oct. 12th Reggie Rhythms with Common Ground Billiards • Beer • Music • Games FREE POOL 12-4 HAPPY HOUR 4-6 For the best selection of Sat., Oct. 13th Jazz Master Stan Getz Hillcrest Shopping Center Hallmark Cards & Gifts shop at ARBUTHNOT'S Southwest Plaza 23rd & Iowa 841 2160 Hallmark Hours M F 10:8 Sat 10:5 Next Weekend "Southside Blues With Feedings" Magic Slim & The Tearrops Oct. 19th & 20th HAYES HOUSE OF MUSIC 944 MASS. 842-5183 TONIGHT 7:30 "One of the best movies about children, and also one of the least childish." —Andrew Sarris, Village Voice Directed by Kohei Oguri (Japanese with English subtitles) Woodruff Auditorium $2 KAW VALLEY DANCE THEATER Presents PAS DE DEUX the art of partnering Friday, Oct. 19th, 8:00 PM | * Saturday, Oct. 20th, 8:00 PM Central Junior High School Auditorium, 14th & Massachusetts Lawnway Adults 83/50 Students & Senior Citizens 82/50 Children 81/00 Tickets on sale at Oasis Juvenile School of Ballet, in the door this advertisement sponsored by University Audio Treble Clef Sheet Music