national Battalion/Page 7 November 15, 1982 HON’Ol al 7 p.m,t lAllov 'iilbeinsii Begin cancels tour after wife Aliza dies Warped by Scott McCullar United Press International LOS ANGELES — Prime Minister Menachem Begin’s wife of 43 years, Aliza, died in Jerusalem early Sunday morn ing and a spokesman said Begin lltst res ^- was canceling the rest of a plan- U.S tesentsBi! ltd neetingaij Jgielanditi James t or Fictioi Lveryone on envirot- dder. Mur, gielatidwi HONOl in the M$C s taken. r from tlit i eveningd t the Jew ON: Aggie- in the Mitt 11 he helda ikliug EaS. npcomkg SCIENCE! and a part' 02 Rudder *: Paul Giles hs Chapel. Ml UNI ned 10-clay U.S. visit to return home immediately. “It is with deep sorrow that I have to report the death of the wife of Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Aliza,” Israeli spokesman Uri Porath said. Porath said the news was re ceived in Los Angeles about 4:30 p.m. PST Saturday. “The prime minister is re turning to Israel immediately,” he said. Begin was to have made his first formal appearance of the U.S. visit less than an hour al ter the death of Mrs. Begin, 62, was disclosed. He received the news while resting prior to a sche duled speech before the Nation al Council ol Jewish Federations at the Bonaventure I Intel. Porath said Begin s Israeli Air Force 707 jet would leav e for New York later Saturday night and then Ily on to Israel. Mrs. Begin had been in critic al condition since being hospital ized several weeks ago for severe respiratory problems. Outside the hotel where Be gin was to speak, several groups of Palestinian Arabs and Amer ican Jews opposed to the prime minister’s policies and American visit gathered for demonstra tions, patrolled by hundreds of police, many on horseback. Inside, a close aide to Begin said his speech Saturday would have stressed “positive ele ments” of Israel’s proposals for Palestinian autonomy and would not directly criticize the Reagan peace plan. One close aide said the prime minister would “stress the posi tive elements of Israel’s propos als for Palestinian autonomy,” rather than “speak to the nega tive” — openly criticize the Reagan initiative. The aide said Begin would of f er condolences to the families of the dead and wounded in Thursday’s bombing of Israeli military headquarters in Tyre. He was not expected, however, to bring up the massacre of Palestinians in Beirut, the aide said. Senior Israeli officials have been playing down reports from Washington of a pending con frontation when Begin and President Reagan meet at the White House next week. Yet they have given no hints Begin would agree to Reagan’s request for a freeze on Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, home for some 1.2 million Palestinians. One senior official said Washington compromised its position as mediator and “hon est broker” by publicly express ing the view the disputed region, about the size of Delaware, should become a Palestinian homeland linked to Jordan. Begin was to have flown to Dallas Monday to meet with Jew ish fundraisers and address a convention of Baptist churches. A major participant was to have been the Rev. Jerry Falwell, head of the Moral Majority and a strong supporter of Israel. A A AC CH Hi this is too MUCH? J'VE HAD EM0U6H OF THE FILM &UILD-U P IN THIS BATHROOM... Bf/OUGH! you! THIS 15 YOUR FAULT, 10UR DOING, ALLEN, )0U SLOB. IN THE SINK, BEHIND THE JOHN, IN THE CLOSET AND T05 FILM, FILM, FILMf EVERYWHERE I LOOK IN THIS BATHROOM THERE'S FILM BUILD-UP. lOU NEVER CLEAN UP AFTER YOURSELF, ALLEN- THIS 15 THE BATHROOM X HAVE TO USE TOO, SO... ..FROM N0\N ON YOU CANT EDIT YOUR MOVIES IN THE BATHROOM ANYMORE.! Social Security ‘here to stay’ Panel says billions needed McGovern says maybe to ‘84 presidential race smo, crotoh HES ;WELRY irchase s set in 01 per Plaza 2 Station -0677 SS United Press International WASHINGTON — George McGovern, encouraged by the success of the nuclear freeze movement in the midterm elec tions, said Saturday he may run for president again in 1984. The 1972 Democratic pres idential nominee admitted, however, the one thing that wor ries him is the prospect of look ing ridiciilotis as a chronic losing candidate. “If I got into it, I’d try it out in Iowa and New Hampshire — those first two or three primar ies,” he said. “If I did poorly. I’d get out. Or if it looked like I was only getting enough votes to damage abetter candidate than the rest of the field, I’d get out. I wouldn’t want to be a spoiler.” McGovern said he would not make a final decision until well into 1983. McGovern, 60, who served three terms in the Senate before his defeat two years ago, carried only Massachusetts and the Dis trict of Columbia in his unsuc cessful attempt to deny Richard Nixon re-election in 1972. “If I decided sometime next year I could help redefine the issues before the country in a way that would be beneficial, I might give it another try, even if I thought the odds of being nominated were not very good,” McGovern said. McGovern’s 1972 campaign was built on the anti-Vietnam War sentiment in the country. He noted nuclear freeze mea sures carried in eight states plus the District of Columbia Nov. 4. “If I felt that on these nuclear war issues and the priorities issues here at home that have to do with the budget and the eco nomy and I could help sharpen that debate and help make those problems better understood, it’s just possible I might get into it,” McGovern said. “I’ve had businessmen talk to me on airplanes about the freeze and say, ‘that makes a lot of sense,”’ McGovern said. “I think it’s a more conservative move ment than the antiwar move ment was back in the ‘60s. There are more lawyers and clergymen involved.” McGovern said he finds run ning against Reagan an intri guing prospect. “I’d love to debate him. I think the guy is incredibly ill- informed on basic issues.” McGovern said Reagan’s Thursday news conference comment that there is “plenty of evidence” foreign agents have infiltrated the nuclear freeze movement is outrageous. McGovern said he has asked no one to support him and has not raised a single dollar or organized a campaign structure or political action committee, and will take no polls. United Press International WASHINGTON — A pres idential commission voted Saturday to assure Americans Social Security “is here to stay,” but agreed on only one idea to meet a $200 billion shortfall — requiring more workers to join the system. “It’s come out in total less than what I would have hoped, but certainly far in excess of what I realistically expected,” Chairman Alan Greenspan told the National Commission on So cial Security Reform as it wrap ped up a three-day meeting aimed at agreeing on recom mendations. Greenspan said the panel agreed on how much Social Security needs and that it should be stabilized, and that the system needs no radical changes, such as a conversion to a voluntary system. “All members of the commis sion are committed basically to the structure with which we are dealing,” Greenspan said. The panel meets again Dec. 10 and members hope to try again to agree on specific recom mendations to raise the $ 150 bil lion to $200 billion they estimate Social Security needs in the next seven years. President Reagan ordered the panel to report by Dec. 31, and Democratic congressional leaders promise quick action on its recommendations to avert a crisis next July, when the old- age fund will be unable to pay checks on time. Greenspan agreed the com mission report should, in the words of Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., “give assurances to the skeptics in this country, of what ever age, that the Social Security system is here to stay.” “Our only difference is the details of how financing to meet these problems is provided,” said Pepper, 82, a member of the commission. Greenspan, a Republican, and Robert Ball, a Democrat and former Social Security com missioner, agreed most of the 15 members on the bipartisan but Republican-dominated panel favor requiring more workers in Social Security. Federal, state, local and non profit group employees are ex empt from the retirement prog ram. The strongest agreement was on federal and non-profit workers, which would raise $21 billion by 1990. Although members lobbied each other in private meetings trying to agree on a package of changes, possibly to include payroll tax hikes and curbs on the cost-of-living payment, the backroom talks failed to pro duce a compromise. 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