Tuesday, December 4, 1984/The Battalion/Page 5 By Jim Earle Budget freeze Suspected Big spending cuts included Snistheid United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan neared decisions Monday on elements of a 1986 budget “freeze” amid further signs his proposed lid on federal spending will require deep cuts in domestic programs to slash the deficit in half. Reagan met with his advisers for three hours to dis cuss sharp reductions needed to hold fiscal 1986 spending to about $968 billion — the same level as this year — and offset growth in such areas as defense and Social Security. While military spending looms as the big variable in the budget equation, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the president and his aides focused on do mestic areas. As the budget work progressed, the idea of a spend ing freeze came under further scrutiny on Capitol Hill, where Figures provided by budget director David Stockman showed a simple freeze of spending on se lected programs would produce only $8.9 billion of the $42 billion in savings needed to.meet a target of $170 billion deficit in fiscal 1986. Stockman also indicated the administration is con sidering Medicare cuts of $7.9 billion over three years. “They are using the word ‘freeze,’ but it’s not a freeze at all,” said a GOP senator’s aide. “It’s a cut.” spt the “How did you get ’em printed so fast?” itudy says less attractive women have top job edge thought to be required for success. said the Stockman report was not presented as a rec ommendation, but to illustrate what a freeze would en tail. At the White House, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes asserted a freeze would “go a long way toward our goal” for deficit reduction. Reagan told reporters late in the day he was “in no position” yet to discuss the Pentagon budget. Speakes said Reagan hopes to wind up work on do mestic portions of the budget by today and issue bud- get-cutting instructions to the Cabinet during a meet ing set for Wednesday. Still to be decided, Speakes said, is whether Reagan will bow to pressure from Capitol Hill and some of his own advisers by agreeing to a smaller increase in the Pentagon budget than the double-digit boost sought by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger. Speakes also hinted Reagan might be more amena ble to compromise than he himself suggested last week, in warning a military cutback could send a wrong sig nal to Moscow about United States resolve. The superpowers are preparing to renew arms con trol talks next montfn Republican congressional leaders said last week Rea gan would have to trim his projected military budget by $8 billion to $15 billion next year to meet his fiscal target with a plan that could be sold to Congress. The Stockman-Reagan blueprint calls for overall re ductions of $42 billion next year, $85 billion in 1987 and $110 billion in 1988. Speakes said Reagan wants Congress to devote pri mary attention to the budget and secondary attention to the tax simplification plan he expects to send to Ca pitol Hill early next year. United Press International NEW ORLEANS — A female for mer mental patient from Houston was booked for a 1983 arson that de stroyed a three-story building in the French Quarter, police said Mon day. Catherine Christley, 22, was ar rested and charged with setting the fire that destroyed the Mad Mad World of T-Shirts on Bourbon Street. Police said the building burned to the ground after a woman began burning T-shirts on the racks with a cigarette lighter. According to the police officers, a woman they knew only as Cathy also crossed the street on the night of the fire and began burning T-shirts in another shop. The woman then fled to a bar near Bourbon Street, where she caught a ride to Baton Rouge. Police said they identified her after learn ing the name of the man who drove Christley. Police said Christley had been a patient at the Houston International Hospital but escaped, and later went back to the hospital. cal United Press International WASHINGTON — The more ieautiful a woman, the less likely she s to land a corporate management iosition and the more likely she is to >e put in a “pink collar” joo, the au- lorof a new study said Monday. Thomas Cash, writing in the De- ember issue of Psychology Today, aid studies show that when women Iried for corporate management bs — a male-dominated field —the note attractive women were dis- riminated against relative to less at- ractive women in those managerial pplications. Cash, associate professor of psy- The flip side, said Cash, is that beautiful women more often get the “pink collar” jobs, ones traditionally dominated by females. n Mem 0 plosions ant aced thne biology at Virginia’s Old Dominion lass bam University, sain in an interview that Jttractive women are at a real disad- on report: vantage when they aspire to occupa- ted in tilt: Ions in which stereotypically mascu- oplewerei: line traits — such as being strong, n criticalo; Undependent and decisive — are e 1< I . • ; . - rial ... a clerical position, nursing, re ceptionists, teaching — in that case, when it is perceived as requiring feminine traits for success — attrac tive women are at advantage,” Cash said. The choices made by male and fe male corporate personnel consul tants at more than 200 corporations on the basis of photographs suggest that the less feminine the appear ance, the more competent the woman, even though the candidates were considered equally qualified. Playboy channel subject of protest United Press International SAN ANTONIO — The Play boy Channel, which offers R- rated movies and other adult pro gramming on cable television, will go on the air despite protests and boycott threats from a fundamen talist minister, cable officials said Monday. About 200 people led by the Rev. Joe West staged a demon stration Sunday outside Rogers Cablesystems of Texas Inc., which is offering the cable chan nel to San Antonio subscribers for the first time. The Playboy Channel is al ready available to Bexar County residents through a different company West, calling the channel the granddaddy of the pornographic movies, vowed his group will boy cott Rogers unless the company drops thd channel. “We are against all forms of pornography, including the movie cable channels,” West told su of pporters outside the company’s Tice in downtown San Antonio. ‘We’re going to keep on protest ing until they pull the channel Protestors' waved Bibles and carried homemade signs in a pro test that briefly interrupted traf fic. West vowed that the group would return Monday, but no demonstrators appeared. World’s Fair cost overruns boosted by consultant fees United Press International NEW ORLEANS — Hundreds of people were paid just under $6 mil lion by the World’s Fair to serve as consultants for everything from at tracting visitors to the Fair to picking up trasn, records revealed. The consultants helped decide how the fair would look and who would help it look that way. Expo president Peter Spurney said many consultants were hired to guard against financial problems and also get experienced people to improve the fair’s staff. But the ex position ended up with debts be tween $100 million and $140 mil lion. Spurney said the $5.9 million was somewhat higher than the amount originally anticipated because some expo employees were listed as con sultants. One of the highest paid consul tants since January was Barry How ard and Associates Inc., according to fair records made public after seve ral newspapers sued for access. Howard, who has worked with Spurney on other expositions, de signed the Petroleum, U.S. and Eu ropean Economic Community pavil ions at the New Orleans fair. The Europeans paid him $20,000 for his work, and the oil industry paid him at least $55,000 for design ing the Petroleum Pavilion. In both cases, the money was funneled to Howard through the fair. While records on Howard’s work for the U.S. Pavilion were not in cluded in the documents made avail able to reporters, Spurney said the federal government reimbursed the fair for the fee. 5-5 234 utlp till ■ 1l to«- ■{al ■0. ... Wish to express our thanks for a great first semester... Wednesday, December 5th at Dealer AUDIOVIDEO 25% To 50% off of all Audio and Video Equipment for ANX members from 4:00 to 10:00. a n d at Zephyr ANX Free open bar^ from 4 to 5 $1 bar drinks from 5 to 10 with an ANX membership card only. - Battalion Classified 845-2611 SUITS SPORTCOATS (EXCLUDING NAVY BLAZERS & CAMEL HAIRS) WOOL TROUSERS - 30% OFF CULPEPPER PLAZA OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL CHRISTMAS Jr