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Please confirm by January 15, 1993 PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN New projections set Clinton's plans back The Associated Press LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — President-elect Clinton, in an interview released yesterday, hedged on his promise to halve the deficit in four years, blaming a bulging debt that he said was forcing him to look for deeper spending cuts and quicker ways to curb health-care costs. "The deficit has got to be dealt with because it will paralyze the ability of our country to deal with other problems—emergencies abroad, needs at home," Clinton said in the PBS interview that was broadcast nine days before he takes office. administration that has promised sweeping change in Washington. Clinton appeared to have much the same goal in mind as he promised to erase $145 billion in red ink in four years — the amount he once thought would cut the debt in half—and said he hoped to erase even more. Worried that voters expect immediate delivery, senior aides aggressively tried to lower expectations for a new "We're going to have to cut more in other places than we would have thought," Clinton said, offering no specifics. "And we're going to have to move more aggressively on the health care front." To that end, Clinton huddled with health care and other advisers in Little Rock to begin the process of drafting the universal health care plan he has promised to submit to Congress within 100 days of taking office. During the campaign, Clinton offered a framework but no formal health care measure, and aides say even the most basic questions remain unanswered, from how fast to phase in universal coverage to what would be mandated in a minimum-benefits package. He also pledged to quickly push other initiatives such as campaign finance reform and his national service program. Communications director George Stephanopoulos said Clinton would meet his health care timetable. But even as Clinton huddled with Vice President-elect Al Gore and an array of policy advisers to discuss health care, his promise to give Congress his economic plan early fell by the way-side. Senate panel questions statements of nominee The Associated Press The documents included intelligence reports on anti-war protests and Martin Luther King Jr.'s followers. One, which included Christopher's scribbled initials, stated that Army "operatives" were the main source of intelligence in Washington. The action by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee came after The Associated Press reported Sunday that Christopher's personal files from when he was deputy attorney general indicated he was informed in 1968 that the Army was conducting surveillance on civilians. President-elect Clinton is satisfied with Christopher's past statements, George Stephanopoulos, Clinton representative, said yesterday. Christopher testified during his 1977 confirmation hearing for deputy secretary of state that he had no knowledge of the surveillance and would have "firmly opposed" it. A representative for Christopher said Sunday that he stood by that testimony. but the Senate panel sent several of the documents quoted in the AP story to the Clinton transition team asking that Christopher explain "any inconsistencies" in writing by tomorrow, one Republican committee staffer said, speaking on condition he not be named. "He has nothing to change," Stephanopoulos told reporters in Little Rock, Ark. WASHINGTON — A Senate committee launched an inquiry yesterday into Secretary of State-designate Warren Christopher's statements 15 years ago to Congress that he did not know the Army spied on civil rights and anti-war protesters in the late 1960s. The panel's top Republican lawyer said he would press to determine whether Christonher lied. "I'm sure there will be questions" of Christopher on the subject when the panel considers his nomination tomorrow, said an anonymous Democratic source on the committee. William C. Triplet, the Republican chief counsel to the committee, said "the real question is, Did this man lie to the Congress?" "That's the whole point of the Iran-Contra scandal: Did they lie to us on the Hill?" Budget nominee warns of possible tax increases The Associated Press some form of value-added tax. WASHINGTON — Leon Panetta, President-elect Bill Clinton's choice for budget director, all but buried hopes for any quick middle-class tax cut yesterday and warned that people should be prepared for sacrifice in the fight against ballooning deficits. Panetta said during his Senate confirmation hearing that "everything is on the table," including Social Security, in the search for ways to reduce a federal deficit that could reach $500 billion early in the next decade. Panetta said that tax increases would have to be a part of any deficits reduction package. He did not endorse anything beyond Clinton's proposal to boost the top rate on the wealthy but said a wide range of new taxes should be examined — from raising the gasoline tax to adopting During nearly six hours of Senate testimony, Panetta repeatedly stressed the urgency of dealing with the budget crisis. "We have a small window of opportunity to get this done," he told the senators. "It is going to be risky, but the bigger political risk will come if we don't do anything." After the hearing concluded, Senate Governmental Affairs Chairman John Glenn predicted that Panetta, who has been chairman of the House Budget Committee for the past four years, would be confirmed quickly. Panetta's hearing began a second week of confirmation sessions as the Senate hurries to confirm Clinton's Cabinet. Carol M. Browner, Clinton's choice to head the Environmental Protection Agency, appeared yesterday at a separate hearing. She sought to allay business concerns about her pollution-fighting zeal. She said that her tenure as director of Florida's Department of Environmental Regulation showed "we can ease the regulatory burden on businesses without compromising the environment." Panetta declined to say whether Clinton would cut the deficit in half by 1996, as he promised during the presidential campaign, in light of the new, higher deficit forecasts included in President Bush's farewell budget. He would say only that such a reduction was "one of the options" being presented to the incoming president. The new forecasts added $236 billion to the deficits during the next six years and said the red ink would hit $320 billion in 1998. Great January Perm Sale SAVE 25% On Any Perm Service Reg. $47.00 NOW $3500 *Price includes shampoo, cut and finish; extra charge for long hair and advanced design wrap. 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