stctteincitioril*k*ld Cabinet resistance to budget plan surfaces By OWEN ULLMANN Associated Press Writer :WASHINGTON (AP) Budget Direc tqr David A. Stockman's assault on next yfar's federal budget, expected to rival the record reductions already achieved, hps spawned a strong resistence movement within President Reagan's own camp. iCabinet secretaries and agency direc tors are fighting Stockman's latest bud get-slashing proposals with a temerity alid skill they lacked last winter, when Stockman called virtually all the shots. ;The growing opposition from top ad- Canada's House of Commons nears final vote By CHARLES J. HANLEY Associated Press Writer ;.OTTAWA (AP) The House of Commons was approaching a final vote yesterday in a 50-year dirive to give Canada a true national charter for the first time. The resolution on constitutional reform, expected to be overwhelmingly ap proved, could also spur on the French separatists of. Quebec. -The resolution asks the British Parliament to eld a legal anachronism by giving up control of qnada's constitution, after first inserting a U.S.- style bill of rights and other new provisions in the dikument. ;The resolution must go from the House of Commons v to the powerless Canadian Senate be fOre being sent to London; where the British Prliament is expected to approve it. Nicaragua gains Soviet support Nation becoming superpower in Central America, U.S. official , says KV MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN Atsociated Press Writer :WASHINGTON (AP) A senior U.S. official said yesterday that• Nicaragua is preparing to bolster its air force with Soviet-made MiG jets and is "on the verge of becoming a superpower in Cen tral American terms." * The official, who spoke on condition his nOme and position not be identified, dksclosed that the revolutionary govern- Ment in Nicaragua recently lengthened three runways to accommodate MiGs. The official said the U.S. government now expects about two dozen MiG jets to Wive in Nicaragua next spring.. •As a result, the official said, the Soviet btoc. "can see for the first time the psissibility of a military base in Central ,America." ;That statement represented the most serious statement yet in a recently tepped-up Reagan administration cam paign warning of a drift of the Sandanista !overnment toward the Soviet bloc. :"The appearance of the planes will tip the balance," the official said. "Now the ondurans have air superiority, but hen the MiGs and pilots get there they ministration officers adds a new and formidable barrier to the president's drive for major new savings in his 1983 budget plan, which he must send to Congress early next year. Congress, which went along last sum mer with much of the president's budget and tax cuts for 1982, also seems less inclined to be as cooperative this time around. "Dave (Stockman) doesn't expect to win all of these (cuts)," conceded one aide at the Office of Management and Budget. "We never expected it to be the same the second time around. Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Tru deau's government hopes to have the process completed by February The constitutional plan, goal of Canadian lead ers for more than 50 years, was the product of a compromise between Trudeau and the premiers of Canada's nine English-speaking provinces, and of last-minute struggles over the rights of women and Canadian native peoples. The last remaining problem is the opposition of Quebec's separatist premier, Rene Levesque, who plans to go to the Canadian Supreme Court one final time in a desperation bid to block a constitution that he contends diminishes the pro vincial powers of French-speaking Quebec. The courts have ruled against him before. In one move last week, Levesque's Cabinet issued a decree declaring that Quebec was exer won't." Honduras has a pro-Western government The arrival of the planes "will cement Nicaragua's military superiority in Cen tral America," the official said. Last week, another senior U.S. official said the Soviet Union recently trans ferred 17 MiG-21 jets to Cuba, prompting speculation this would allow Cuba to send older MiGs to Nicaragua. Earlier, U.S. officials had said Nicaraguan pilots are being training in Bulgaria. Reviewing Soviet bloc influence in Ni caragua, the senior official said yester day that the capital, Managua, "has become an international center with East Germans there, Bulgarians there, North Koreans there, Soviets there, Cu bans there, and even the PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization.)" The official said East Germans were handling Nicaragua's internal securit y,and Cubans were running its army. The official said that when the Sanda nistas overthrew Anastasio Somoza two and-a-half years ago the Nicaraguan army had 7,000 men mostly concentrated in Managua. Now, he said, it has 50,000 "before, the Cabinet officers didn't even know where the bathroom was. They weren't on their feet. Now they are." A year ago, even before Reagan and his Cabinet took office, then-Rep. Stock man of Michigan was assembling an awesome package of spending cuts total ing nearly $5O billion. Acknowledged widely as a brilliant budget mastermind, Stockman sold the president on almost every item on the list. For the next budget, Stockman is ex pected to produce a package of cuts at least as large as the last one, to narrow a cising a "veto" over the new constitution, some thing it said French-Canadians were entitled to do as one of the country's "two founding nations." But federal Justice Minister Jean Chretien, a French Quebecer but a staunch federalist, replied that Levesque "can pass a decree if he wants that there will be no snow in . Quebec this winter and it will have the same effect." Levesque says he opposes the plan because, among other things, it makes illegal parts of a Quebec law that discourages English-language education in the province, and overrides other laws that favor Quebecers over other Canadians in employment The Quebec leader's critics assert that he never planned to accept any constitutional agreement, in the hope that a new split between Quebec and English Canada would boost the cause of his Parti troops and an additional 200,000 mili tiamen. 'The appearance of the planes will tip the balance. Now the Hondurans have air superiority, but when the MiGs and pilots get there (Nicaragua) they won't.' —U.S. official Secretary of State,Alexander M. Haig Jr. had said previously there are 3,000 Cubans in Nicaragua, including doctors, teachers and some military advisers. The .senior official who disclosed the information on the MiG jets said one of the powerful Ortega brothers recently gaping deficit projected at more than $lOO billion. But top department administrators, having grown familiar with and protec tive of their programs, are complaining that Stockman is going too far. They hope the president will listen to them this time. In acknowledging the fights that lie ahead, White House officials announced last weekend that next month the presi dent will become heavily involved in shaping the 1983 budget by personally hearing his Cabinet officers' appeals. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes was "in Moscow for a week or 10 days." He did not specify whether he meant Nicarguan Defense Minister Humberto Ortega or Daniel Ortega, a member of the Sandinistas' ruling directorate. The official said Nicaragua is "on the verge of becoming a superpower in Cen tral American terms." He said this causes U.S. concern because "insurgen cies are being fed in • Guatemala and Honduras in the same way as in El Salvador." The Reagan administration has de scribed the El Salvadoran insurgency, as Cuban-backed aggression with weapons funneled through Nicaragua to the Salva doran guerrillas The Nicaraguan government has ex pressed concern that the Reagan admin istration is supporting efforts to overthrow it. The Nicaraguans have said they need to build their defenses against raids from Honduras by former Somoza guardsmen and against perceived mili tary threats from other governments in the region. Haig has warned in recent weeks of Nicaragua's "drift toward totalitaria nism."• said Reagan "expects an unusual num ber of appeals" because the cuts for 1983 will•be "very deep." "We're going through a more normal process this year," said a budget official at the Labor Department, which plans to appeal proposed budget cuts in its pro grams. "Last time, it all happened so fast; this time, it's a more orderly proce dure. Several department budget officials said the stiffened resistance has not been prompted in any way. by Stockman's confessed doubts about Reagan's eco nomic program. Quebecois government, which wants to pull the province out of the Canadian confederation. Quebec voters, by a 60-to-40 ratio, rejected the separatist option in a referendum in May 1980. At a convention this weekend in Montreal, PQ militants are expected to push for a new indepen dence campaign, possibly through early provin cial elections fought solely on the secession issue. Although the revised constitution reduces the powers of Canada's provinces in some ways, in others it firmly establishes the world's second largest country a vast land of only 24 million people as a highly decentralized federation. The constitution, has been the British North America Act of 1867, an act of the British Parlia ment that formed an independent nation out of the colonial provinces. London has tried to relinquish control of the schedules meeting Haig Nicaraguan official with By MARC D. CHARNEY Associated Press Writer CASTRIES, St. Lucia (AP) Sec retary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr., arriving in this Caribbean island nation yesterday at the start of the Organization of American States assembly, set talks with Nicara gua's foreign minister as his first private meeting, a U.S. spokesman said. Haig is expected to address the 27- member general assembly today. A Newsweek magazine report said he would call for a tough new line by nations of the Americas against Cuba. State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said Haig would meet privately later today with Miguel d'Escoto Brockman, Nicaragua's foreign minister. Ashley Wills, spokesman for the. U.S. Embassy in the, eastern Caribbean, said it was Haig's first scheduled bilateral con versation. Recent U.S. charges that Nicara- The Daily Collegian; Thursday, Dec. David A. Stockman •!) Senate Democrats find opposition. to amendments for military bill WASHINGTON (AP) Senate ; Democrats, saying the nation is "overprepared for nuclear . war," met solid Republican opposition yesterday', as they unsuccessfully tried to increase spending; for military manpower and conventional war 1 , gear. Rejected in virtual party-line votes were; amendments to the $208.5 billion military spend-: ing bill, which includes $2.43 billion sought by. President Reagan to start construction of 100 B-1 5 . bombers. • The, Democrats said they were trying to shift] money .away from the B-1. An amendment to eliminate funds for the bombers was expected to: be offered later. Among the defeated amendments were propo-h sals to add $77 million for more soldiers and airmen; $l4B million for Army ammunition; $6O, million for faster production of tanks, trucks and; ; other equipment; and $74.6 million to intensify ; U.S. naval presence in the Persian Gulf. Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., said the United; States was "overprepared for nuclear war" and; would be "unprepared for conventional war," unless spending on such items as ammunition and manpower was increased. Sen. J. James Emily', sponsor of the $6O - force-modernization amendment, ap pealed to Republicans not to "follow blindly, the-• dictates of the leaderliii);" - btillifs proposal was '; defeated 56-37, with no Republican support. 54, The manpower amendment would have pro vided funds for 6,000 more soldiers and 6,000 more; airmen. . • ife Hollings said the administration's decision t 0..; abandon its original request for the troop increas es was "a reversal of a manpower policy and a:1 defense posture that had been carefully consid- , I ered as a minimum force necessary." *4 Sen. Warren Rudman, R-N.H., contended that-4 the Air Force and Army supported the amounts:. already in the bill, which would increase Air',; Force strength by 10,500 people and maintain'; Army strength at existing levels. on charter document to Canada . since 1931, but federal and provincial leaders here could not agree on how-: amendments would be ratified once the constitu-"• tion was theirs. As a result, amendments request ed by Canada have had to be enacted by the British Parliament. z. The separatist movement that arose in Quebeco , in the late.l97os prompted Canadians to try again , . to seek a firmer legal foundation for their confed-': eration. At a constitutional conference held Nov..: 2-5 a dozen have been held over the past half- - ; century Trudeau and the nine premiers , finally) • reached an accord. The Nov. 5 agreement had dropped proposed' guarantees of sexual equality of rights and the rights of Canadian Indians and Eskimos. After a'; strenuous lobbying campaign by women's and native groups, the provisions were restored. .1, .. - r . y. ~ ..... .. ~..„ ~..„ .. „,.. „..., ?„,..... ~, ~..,. .... „.,..,....,..,,, .'. Alexander M. Haig Jr. gua was drifting to the left, and accusations by the Central Ameri can nation that the United States was preparing some form of action against Nicaragua, have formed a worrisome backdrop to the opening of this assembly. news brieft3 Dates set for French elections PARIS (AP) The French Cab inet yesterday set March 14 and March 21 as the dates for next year's two-round cantonal elections that will mark the first test of the new Socialist government's grassroots strength. Officials of about half of France's 3,629 cantons, roughly eqqivalent in structure to counties, will be up for election in balloting that also will show the progress of the conserva tive opposition to rebuild its base. The government also plans to cre ate about 160 new cantons to con form with demographic changes, and those new posts also will be up for election. Cantonal officials are elected for six-year terms. Every three years, half of them face re-election. The. Socialists ended 23 years of U.S. weapons PEKING (AP) China's official Xinhua news agency yesterday sharply attacked proposed U.S. weapons sales to Taiwan, saying that American supporters of such sales are meddling in Chinese af fairs and acting like "overlords." The commentary was the latest sign of increasing Chinese opposi tion to U.S. policy on Taiwan, the Chinese island province governed by the rival Nationalists. China has vowed an unspecified but, strong reaction. • , Xinhua said: "Unable to,advance any tenable arguments to justify their position in faVor of arms sales to Taiwan, a number of Americans Royal pregnancy understood FALMOUTH, England (AP) Prince Charles, explaining the fre quent absences of the pregnant Prin cess Diana, said yesterday he's beginning to understand female problems. Diana, 20 and expecting a baby in June, cancelled three appearances this week and several last month, apparently, because of morning sick ness. "I must apologize for the absence , of my wife," the 33-year-old prince told well-wishers during a tour here. "I have come to the conclusion that most ladies think that we men don't understand the problems they face," said Charles. "But I must say, I am slowly beginning to find out what they are." unbroken conservative rule with the election this ,spring of President Francois Mitterrand and a Socialist Majority in the National Assembly. . Since then, the Socialists have moved the country sharply to the left economically -- nationalizing key industries and all remaining private banks, imposing a wealth tax, cre ating public jobs through public spending and increasing social secu rity benefits. Another major government pro ject is the decentralization of local government, reversing a centuries long system under which most local government o decisions were made by federally-appointed prefects. The dates for the cantonal elec tions coincide roughly with the dates for final parliamentary debate on the decentralization law. sales opposed have now come out to suggest that the. U.S. government should go aheOd with its decision regardless of China's reaction." The commentary said some Amer icans "still believe that China's sov ereignty is limited, but , that of the United States is boundless. The idea that that United States has a right to meddle in China's affairs reminds people of the theciry of 'limited sov ereignty.' China, which regards the Soviet Union has the world's greatest men ace, has used this so-called limited sovereignty theory to' describe Kremlin policy toward Eastern Eu ropean countries such as Poland. Prince Charles ' Conference Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., walks through placard-waving delegates to the White House Conference on Aging, Wednesday, as he arrives to address the conference's Committee on Economic Well-Being. On Tuesday, •President Rea gan, in a surprise visit to the conference, said he is frustrated at being portrayed as an enemy of his own generation and added he would not betray those entitled to Social Security benefits. Funeral services held in Hollywood for actress Natalie Woo BY YARDENA ARAR Associated Press Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) To the soft strains of Russian balalaika music, actor Robert Wagner bent and kissed the flow er-covered casket of his wife, Natalie Wood, as she was buried yesterday in the city she loved. About 100 people gathered around the gravesite in the warm afternoon sun shine, bidding farewell to the actress who drowned over the weekend. The mourners included Wood's two daughters, Courtney, 7, and Natasha, 11, a daughter by a previous marriage. Photographers, barred from the subur ban Los Angeles cemetery, crowded out side along a wall about 30 yards from the Reagan asks for fresh start with union leaders By •MERRILL HARTSON AP Labor Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan, lamenting that he has become "estranged from labor," asked AFL-CIO leaders for a fresh,start yesterday and prom ised, for his part, that he will review the mass firings of air traffic controllers. • But despite the optimism 'expressed by union leaders over Reagan's remarks in an Oval Office meeting, a later written notice from , the White House press office appeared to rule out any prospect that the 11,500 fired controllers would be brought back to their old jobs. According to the AFL-CIO contingent, including presi dent Lane Kirkland, Reagan promised a full review of grave of the woman who was born Nata sha Gurden, daughter of Russian immi grants.. Wagner had been under a doctor's care as he grieved over his wife's death. Friends said he had seemed still unable to accept her death. "I think it will take a little time before it hits him," said Daily Variety column ist Army Archerd, a family friend. "It's like he thinks someone made a horrible mistake and (Wood) will just come walk ing in the door anytime." Days before she died, Wood had talked with another Hollywood columnist and friend, Roderick Mann of the Los An geles Times, about her plans for finishing "Brainstorm," making her. February the controllers issue. The union officials said they took Informed of that statement, AFL-CIO spokesman Rex that to mean that not only might he lift the three-year Hardesty said the White House had "closed the door" on ban on any other government employment for the fired • 'the federation's desire that the controllers be re strikers a prospect he raised a day earlier but that instated. "This puts us back to square one," he said. they might actually be returned to their old jobs. Speakes quoted Reagan as telling the AFL-CIO lead- At first, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said ership in an hour-long meeting that "I never anticipated that "there are no plans now to put them back in the I would be estranged from labor with all the years I put towers." But he agreed that Reagan didn't rule that out, in as a union member. either. A day earlier, Reagan told leaders of the Teamster But later, in a written notice to the press, the White union he was considering whether to lift a three-year House said "is not considering rehiring these ban on any federal employment for the air traffic individuals as air -traffic controllers." Rather, the strikers. Yesterday, according to the AFL-CIO contin notice said, the issue remains whether to lift the tan on gent, he went a step further and said he "will review" any federal employment. the entire issue. WINTER TERM SCHEDULE THE CAMPUS LOOP 'm Inner Loop - Weekdays, Daytime Weekdays 7:30 AM to 6:00 PM No buses in service Leaving student parking lot near East Halls every 10 minut TIMETABIE (Minutes past the hour) "East Halls 00 10 20 30 40 50 Computer Center 01 11 21 31 41 51 Wolf-Ritner Hall 02 12 22 32 42 52 McElwain Hall 03 13 23 33 43 53 White Building 05 15 25 35 45 55 College-Meister 07 17 27 37 47 57 College-Allen 10 20 30 40 50 60 Bus Depot 11 21 31 41 51 01 Mineral Sciences 12 22 32 42 52 02 Rec Hall 13 23 33 43 53 03 Library-Kern Forum Building Creamery ETIEMSE *Timed stop. Times for other stops are approximate Outer LOOP —Weekdays, Daytime Weekdays 7:30 AM to 6:00 PM . Two buses in service, leaving the HUB every quarter hour. TIMETABLE (Minutes past the hour) •HUB McElwain Hall Wolf-Rltnor Halls Natatorium Wagner Shields M 6 0 Fleet Operations Horse Barns Meats Lab. Land 6 Water Inst. Materials Research *Graduate' Circle Shields East Halls (2 stops) Computer Center Wolf-Ritner Halls McElwain Hall Creamery Forum-Library Library-Kern Willard Campus Loop - Evenings, Weekends Buses leaving student parking lot near East Halls: Every 10 minutes Weekdays 6:00 PM - 10:30 PM Every 20 minutes* Weekdays 10:30 PM - 12:15 AM Saturdays 7:30 AM - 12:15 AM Sundays 12:00 P2l - 12:15 AM ' TIMETABLE (Minutes past the hour) •East Halls Natatorium Shields University Drive Pollock-Shortledge White Building College-Heister *College-Allen Bus Depot Rec Hall Kern-Library Forum Building Creamery North Halls A. fleet service van has been specially equipped with a wheelchair lift to assist handicapped students who are unable to ride the campus loop bus. Interested students should call Mrs. Brenda Hameister at 863-2020 between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Mon thru Fri. After hours and on weekends call Fleet operations at 865-7571 for service. stage debut in "Anastasia" at the Los Angeles Civic Theater, and then taking her annual tt•ip to Europe with Wagner. He said she held a special fondness for the city where she began her 39-year film career at age 4 and quoted her as saying: "I love this town. I suppose it's because I grew up here." A statement from publicists Rogers and Cowan, distributed. at the funeral, said Wood's will would be filed for pro bate today in Los Angeles Superior Court. Wagner, 51, is sole executor and trustee, the release said, and Miss Wood's attorney, Paul Ziffren, was named his successor. Meanwhile, sheriff's deputies contin ued investigating her apparent drowning 14 24 34 44 54 04 15 25 35 45 55 05 16.26 36 46 56 06 17.27 37 47 57 07 00 15 30 45 01 16 31 46 02 17 32 47 03 18 33 48 04 19 34 49 05 20 35 50 06 21 36 51 07 22 37 52 08 23 38 '53 10 25 40 55 11 26 41 56 12 27 42 57 15 30 45 00 17 32 47 02 18 33 48 03 19 34 49 04 19 34. 49 04 20 35 50 05 22 37 52 07 24 39 54 09 25 40 55 10 26 41 56 11 00 A l 0 20 • 30 40 A 50 00 10 20 R 30 40 50 COLLEG Effective August. 27, 1979 Special Service for the Handicapped 're) $.25 EXACT FARE RIDE FREE AFTER 9 PM Campos Loop 3 .1 4, a ra 11.0.1,/ " PO. lA. • *OIIIIIIIIIMINIICO.. • - 1.. 6, 6 , 111.... . 5e.... I=ITEI 1=213 The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 3, 1981 early Sunday . off Santa Catalina Island. Sheriff's homicide investigators said they planned to re-interview Wagner and actor Christopher Walken, 38, after hedg ing on coroner's comments that the two actors' "heated argument" prompted Wood to leave them on the Wagners' yacht Splendor for a dinghy ride about midnight. Assistant Coroner Richard Wilson now says "argument" was too strong a word. Los Angeles County Coroner Thomas Noguchi said the actress slipped on the yacht's swim step as she tried to board the dinghy. Tests showed Miss Wood's blood alco hol level at 0.14, slightly above Californi a's 0.10 drunken driving standard. 10°11)0 0 .,. 000 1 0••••• r e." 11 c,.. , •' , 1 11 *""'"' ej -. ''ii t 1