mm ilpjjS) Friday, May 4, 1984/The Battalion/Page 13 ' °f man)', ho, becaJ ^ years io] iictimes on the party t | •ans in gets 20 years to life ( down 1 n on his feigned it acknosvle staff men lified. for thefe ni strati® I FAA Jj i'e phnt eret Seni ally sound >an said kson plan not unii)i m. "Even a had J. Group Prayer Photo by ELIZABETH COOKSEY Texas A&M students join together in prayer to commemorate President ■Reagan’s National Day of Prayer Thursday at Rudder Fountain. The event was sponsored by Campus Cru sade for Christ. United Press International WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — Repentant radical Kathy Bou din was sentenced Thursday to 20 years to life in prison for her role in the 1981 Brink’s ar mored car robbery that left an armed guard and two po licemen dead. The former Weather Under- gound leader received the sen tence for pleading guilty to sec ond-degree murder and was given a concurrent 12'/2-to-25 year term for robbery. She will be eligible for parole in 17 years, when she will be 58. Before her guilty plea she faced 75 years to life on 13 counts. “I want to express my sorrow for the deaths of Sgt. Edward O’Grady and patrolman Wa- verly Brown directly to the fam ily members who are here today and continue to grieve their loss,” said Boudin. But she said she was still com mitted to political change and “my ideals give me strength, to day, as well as yesterday and to morrow.” Diane O’Grady, widow of O’Grady, denounced Boudin’s remorse. “The events involving Kathy Boudin have left me with feel ings of extreme anger and frus tration,” she said. “Regardless of her claimed remorse, in my heart I believe Kathy Boudin knowingly and willingly took part in all aspects of this horri- eficit Iternative could cut $200 billion in three years United Press International ngwitliliH local f< e joined feagan ■d to wi at would ner. JVASHINGTON — Sen. ■wton Chiles, D-Fla., called on e wouldri| Senate Thursday to take a is to doArger bite from the federal def- ulturahjdt than President Reagan ot hesilaAits by approving a Demo- subsi ratic alternative that would cut if the r||)() billion in three years. RThe Democratic proposal ihat rffi drafted in response to the jublican leaders’ $144 billion fee-year deficit cutting pack- The GOP document has n endorsed by Reagan and noiecolijulibed the “Rose Garden” plan i of Readme it was announced there in Kjruary after talks with Demo ns disintegrated, enate leaders had hoped to Je a vote on the Democratic Iposal Thursday, but the jy was delayed because many ators had left town early for | weekend. The Senate did plan a session Friday. are severe II ver ation s stinks »j n a hoi Reagan’s “Rose Garden” doc ument calls for a 7.5 percent hike in military spending for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, and would not touch indexing. Indexing is aimed at reduc ing the “bracket creep” that makes taxpayers pay more just because their salaries have kept pace with inflation. Chiles said the Democratic plan would send a stronger sig nal to Financial markets that the deficit is being cut, and result in lower interest rates. “We have seen interest rates go up since the Rose Garden plan was announced,” Chiles said. “If we don’t pass a plan that has sufficient restraint, and I think this one does, then inter est rates are going to go up fur ther.” Reagan, returning to Wash ington from China Wednesday, called Republican senators from Air Force One urging de feat of a proposed one-year budget freeze and passage of his plan instead. The freeze proposal failed late Wednesday. The Pentagon, meanwhile, which has sternly resisted all suggestions for a budget cut, yielded to congressional and White House pressures and sliced nearly $14 billion — less than 5 percent — from its $305 billion request for next year. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told a news confer ence he had been reluctant to make the cuts — which would trim almost all programs except nuclear weapons. The GOP plan also would in clude two separate limits on the amount that can be spent in the next three years on either mili tary or domestic spending. Those ceilings are critical to the plan, according to Senate Re publican leader Howard Baker. LhagronJ \le have seen interest lies go up since the educam t the s #b id schoopse Garden plan was jn d. an hnoiineed. If we a classn f uion t pass a plan that as sufficient re- Presic T . educaii taint, and l think this ne does, then interest is makinf in the sf es are going to go is still I further. ’ — Sen. iai(l hf l/ies organ®*''"” take ontj ,t make Hart’s strategy ite wasij ork of ■s to the 1 There was something about e fact that there wasn’t going be a Friday session that made pie start to make early reser- lons,” Chiles said. The pro- al should come to a vote t week. Tides said the Democratic which he authored, does do as much as he would like lop the gush of red ink, but compares “very favorably” h the GOP plan, lis proposal would allow a 5 cent increase in the Penta- ii’s budget and raise revenues among other things, de- Ing tax indexing for infla- m, set to start next year. JJ.'s PACKAGE STORES Announces ## Hot" Specials on Beer! Budweiser 24-12oz $10.25 Miller Lite 24-12oz $10.55 Miller 24-12oz. $10.25 Michelob 24-12oz $10.70 Coors 24-12oz $10.05 Coors Lt. 24-12oz $10.35 Pearl Stubbies 24-12oz $5.95 Old Milwaukee 24-12oz $8.60 16oo Tx Ave. South J.J. Ruffino Class 73 ;LL YOUR USE BOOKS FOR MORE! at giiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimHiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiniiimmiiimimg lirpi University Book Stores mi l s JL IM NORTHGATE -open b a.«. CULPEPPER PLAZA A I M l | dfe 409 UNIVERSITY OR. late p.m.- NEXT TO 3C-BBQ j siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiHiiimmiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiitmiiiiiiil Op&n ’til 8 p.m. through Finals ble crime that took the lives of three innocent men, including my husband, Ed.” Friends and relatives of Bou din and the victims crowded into the Westchester County courtroom for sentencing be forejudge David Ritter. The sentence for Boudin, 40, who has a 3-year-old son, in cludes time served. She pleaded guilty to participating in the $1.6 million heist of a Brink’s armored car in Nanuet, N.Y., on Oct. 20, 1981. I was there out of my com mitment to the black liberation struggle,” she said. “I am a white person who does not want the crimes committed against black people to be carried in rny name.” Boudin will serve time at Bedford Correctional Facility for Women, which has a visiting room for children and already houses co-defendant Judith Clark. Rockland County District At torney Kenneth Gribetz said he was satisfied with the sentence but called Boudin’s methods “vile and despicable.” Her husband, David Gilbert, last fall was sentenced to 75 years to life for participating in the robbery and her sentence left only co-defendant Samuel Brown, 43, to stand trial. Black Liberation Army mem ber Kuwasi Balagoon and Clark were convicted last fall. V Pizzaworks7 Many people call me at DoubleDaves and they say “Hey, what do you have on special? 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