—The Daily Collegian Monday, Sept. 11, 1978 Vote on WASHINGTON (AP) Congress will decide this week how big a reduction in income taxes it wants to vote this year for individuals and businesses. Lawmakers will require another month to work out details of the tax reduction. But budget-writers will try to decide Monday or Tuesday whether the tax cut should be held to the $16.3 billion favored by the House, the $19.4 billion recommended by the Senate, or somewhere in between.. House leaders generally favor the lower figure for fear that too large a tax cut would worsen inflation. But there is strong sentiment in the Senate for a bigger tax reduction in an effort to keep the economy growing. Meanwhile, the Senate begins its long awaited debate Monday on a com promise natural gas bill that has been 16 months in preparation. The bill, a part of Carter's energy plan, would end federal price controls over newly discovered natural gas by 1985 and gradually raise the price of other gas. An estimated 30 senators say they are undecided on the measure, which is under attack from consumer groups as too costly and from producers as resulting in too much government regulation. What could be the critical vote on the compromise is likely Wednesday or Thursday. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D- Ohio, will attempt to have the gill sent back to the conference committee which wrote it. That probably would kill the bill for the year. . . contemporary casuals/ family & w(adding/ portraiture candids.& formal party groups tax cut planned; question Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd conceded Sunday that supporters of the bill do not yet have the votes needed to save it, but repeated his assertion that he is "increasingly optimistic that the votes will be there when the roll is called." He made the comments on the ABC interview program "Issues and An swers." A House vote is likely Monday on Carter's proposal to streamline the civil service system, whiCh already has passed the Senate. Later in the week, House members will decide whether to trim the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act, the main federal job creation program. Two bodies pulled from plane wreckage LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) The bodies of two victims were pulled from are wreckage of a C-130 cargo plane Sunday, the last of eight crew members killed in a training mission crash that left rubble strewn across a central Ar kansas hillside. ' Although the first Air Force officers to reach the scene after the plane crashed late Friday night immediately said there could be no survivors, only six deaths had been confirmed after a 24-hour search throgh the charred rubble. The name of the sixth victim, which had been withheld, was released along with those of the two victims recovered Sunday The cause of the crash was not im mediately known, and Staff Sgt. Cynthia Hall said it probably would be months before an investigation was completed. The four-engine jumbo carrier ap parently hit a ridge called Billy Goat Hill, bounced and then crashed onto the hillside, leaving a three-quarter mile trail of burning forest in its path. Only the sheared tail section remained intact, flung over the flaming fuselage onto a logging road. The nearest home is about a mile from the crash site, but residents said they could see a ball of fire in the sky. </464 ° Pnik'4p.6 news from the wires Restaurant's name sparks controversy PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) Calling the Sambo's restaurant chain name "a constant reminder of slavery," the head of the Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights Sunday said he would seek state legislation banning it. James R. Warrick Jr., the com mission's executive director, said he would support a bill to amend the restaurant chain's corporate charter so it couldn't use the name in Rhode Island. Stand in line for your hamburger at the SCMIC old place (yawn), or read a Jew pages while it's cooked to order at the Nittany Lion Inn (wow!). The Inn place for lunch . . . not fast food, fantastic • food (aaahh!) is, how much? Presently, the California-based chain has two Sambo's in Rhode Island and two more under , construction. The Legislature does not meet again until January. . "Minorities resent having to live in a community that permits businesses to openly advertise a name that provides a constant reminder, of slavery," Warrick said. Balloon leak busts record-breaking try , RIDGECREST, Calif, (UPI) A rupture in a hot air balloon plummeted two daredevil airmen down to earth from 30,000 feet, foiling their attempt to set high altitude records for a balloon and hang glider. The two landed amost unscratched in a restricted area of the China Lake Naval Air Station Saturday. Frenchman Stephance Dunoyer de Segonzac, the hang glider pilot, landed on the Naval Ordnance Test Center air strip. Because it is restricted military territory, Dunoyer was held for questioning until government authorities realized why he had landed there. BallooniSt Gary Cervany of Glendale, Calif., rode his ruptured balloon down at 1,200 feet a minute, calmly protecting $5,000 worth of camera equipment as he prepared for the rough landing 10 miles east of Ridgecrest, iJ~i4~iyi~LJ~i~T~i~'~iiLifl Study Abroad —Peru Who: Business Administration Students When: Winter Term 1979 Where: ESAN, Lima, Peru Wed., Sept. 13 207 Bus. Ad. Bldg. .e4?•)t.G'ltOlt4l(4colLOlLO•l‹.oltol9qtolcplt.olcoxolip•%z.tac4 A BAILRoADI N AsTAuRAt6G TOE TRAIN STATION e fi Sociablellan a t tlenu t itlody, an 0/0°11,5°4 - Palace, a Salad 'Freak's Headquarters, a Steak Law's Itertdezvolis, alfarninhterlieaVett, a Train Buffa Dream, a Caboose Connoiseas Corner, a MVsher's paradise, and aTenny?incher's Telitbht. 424 e. college aye:. statq college, pa., 11 am - 2 am daily The two men were attempting to break the world record for a high altitude hang glider flight of 31,600 feet set two years ago by Bob McCaffery of Sylmar, Calif: Their goal was 40,000 feet. Until sealed barographs aboard both crafts are examined next week, it will not be known how close they came. The ascent almost aborted 200 feet over- California City Airport, 50 miles south of Ridgeorest, -when another: balloonist collided with Dunoyer as he hung suspended under the experimental 160,000-cubic foot balloon. ~ Somehow the.. other balloon, whose pilot was not identified, did not rupture and Dunoyer was not harmed. After that, the ascent was almost routine and the two men reached 30,000 feet in abolit half an hour. Suddenly, however, Cer.: vany felt his gondola shake and looked up to,see a 20-foot rip in one seam in the canopy. He said he tore off his oxygen mask and yelled to Dunoyer, who did not heat' him, that he was going to drop the hang glider pilot. Meanwhile, Dunoyer said he sensed something was wrong when his altimeter showed that he was not climbing any more and he prepared to be dropped by moving forward on the parakite,. He dropped 2,000 feet, he said, estimating his speed at more than 100 m.p.h., before he could bring the kite under controU ,i Orientation Meeting 7:00 pm
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