Nation hursdayApii House highway bill threatens balanced budget California neighbort^— WASHINGTON (AP) — The anced budget in three decades, Chairman Bud Shuster, R-Pa., a “I think it’s doubtful that well House neared passage Wednesday of a $217 billion spending bill that would shower states with highway projects but raise questions about whether the commitment to a bal anced budget has given way to old- fashioned pork barrel politics. The six-year spending bill, ex pected to pass overwhelmingly Wednesday evening, was touted as salvation to the nation’s crumbling bridges, overtaxed mass transit sys tems and dangerous highways. It would create hundreds of thousands of high-paying construction jobs. “This is a bill that is good for all America for all time,” said Rep. James Oberstar of Minnesota, rank ing Democrat on the Transporta tion Committee. But it also exceeds the sum of last year’s balanced budget deal set aside for transportation projects by $26 billion, prompting concern that, on the verge of the first bal- Congress was already slipping back into its old spending ways. “I simply do not feel we have the money,” said Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin, ranking Democrat on the Appropriations Committee. He said it was “spectacularly irrespon sible” that neither the Senate, which approved a $214 billion bill a month ago, nor the House had specified how it would pay for the extra spending. The White House has expressed concern about the spending level. “We urge both the House and the Senate to pause and take a deep breath and consider how we’re go ing to pay for this,” said Office of Management and Budget Director Franklin Raines. The House bill calls for spending some $180 billion on highway build ing, $36 billion on mass transit and $1.6 billion on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Transportation Committee s Taking the MCAT in August? ^ reasons to sign up For our course by April 10 th ] Take your first diagnostic test early so you know exactly what your strengths and weaknesses are o Receive our extensive hyperlearning science review early to ^ brush up on those problem areas i : Take four extra sessions specifically for the Verbal section ■ ) of the MCAT - the section that makes your score stand out ■ the most - sessions start April 11 ,h k A ^ Save $100 on the best course available Ask us about our +8 pt. avg. increase & our Try Us For Free program! THE PRINCETON REVIEW Call today 409/696-9099 www. review, com The Princeton Review is not associated with Princeton Univercity nor AAMC. Score improvement based on 1997 ICR study. Students: Register to win a fun-filled evening of barbecue and conversation with President Ray M. Bowen and other university officials. Monday, April 27,1998 5:30 p.m. Sign up this week at the following locations * Blocker • MSC Flag Room • Wehner Building • Rec Center • Commons Lobby • * Winners will be notified by mail. 3 t a u a n t THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL! Crawfish S Beer! • $ 2.99/lb. Crawfish • $ 4.95 Pitchers • 99* Drafts Daily Specials $ 5.50 268-5333 3 I 7 College Ave. • Old Albertson’s Shopping Center longtime champion of highway spending, insisted that all the pro ject money would come from the tax Americans pay at the gas pump. “The cold hard fact remains we are simply spending the revenue coming in. This is honesty in budgeting.” The problem is that the highway trust fund is calculated as part of the general budget, reducing the deficit. Taking it off-budget, as the Shuster bill calls for, would require finding additional savings to keep the budget in balance. Fiscal conservatives have also criticized Shuster for setting aside 5 percent of the money, more than $9 billion, for 1,463 projects that indi vidual lawmakers requested for their districts. Republicans were given 55 per cent of the money and Democrats 45 percent, and the complaint, strongly denied by Shuster, was that pork barrel politicking decided who got what. over 1,400 projects are deserving of federal attention,” said Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla., noting that the last sbe- year program enacted in 1991 had only 539 such projects. The proposed projects include a $100,000 rail-highway feasibility study in Muncie, Ind., a $4.5 million pedestrian and bicycle path in New London, Conn., and a $97 million widening of the 1-40 cross-town bridge in Oklahoma City. The House was expected to de feat an amendment proposed by Rep. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to eliminate all the special project money and another by Budget Com mittee Chairman John Kasich, R- Ohio, a strong critic of the bill’s spending levels, to gradually turn the federal trust fund over to the states. The old highway act expired last fall and a six-month extension ap proved to keep money flowing while Congress worked on the new bill runs out May 1. FREMONT, Calif. (AP) — Mo han Sharma is baffied by a series of bombings that have targeted the quiet and scenic neighborhood where he is building his $2 million dream house. There have been three bomb ings since Sunday and two more explosives were found before they went off. No one has been hurt, but the attacks have made residents scared and angry in this town 30 miles southeast of San Francisco. “I don’t know why they'd target anyone here,” Sharma said Wednes day. “Some lunatic is just disrupting the peace of this community.” Fremont’s tranquility was shat tered early Sunday morning when a firebomb exploded at the house of Police Chief Craig Steckler. The blast ripped a 10-foot-wide hole in the roofands porch on fire. That afternoon, hi sor as police chief, ( Bob Wassennan, found explosive in a brown pt the walkway leading door. It was safelydisa Sunday evening, bombs stuffed intoai ripped through a newly 3 A 17-year-old girl \vtI the time and escapedir l On Monday even, | acting on a phone tip ft I bomb hidden in crawls! house under construes I The bomb squad dl nated it. The last bomb w. i backpack left hangirJ town's water tower.Thr l not damaged. C»U Vlth • -rrrXr i.i.i.iy i i r CClX 1. 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I Perhaps it was ■y to overlook ||ny of America ffissponsibility a Jncle Sam barke condemnations < |ddam Hussein !e grim disparit says” and “what 1 | But now that tl subsided, it is higl cd States is just as promises to the U Had you not h< vernment is thf the United Nat: Years of neglec lembership in tl led an IOU to the While our Capi celebrate budget: other on the back looking for his pa; |; The secretary-; Nations has madi .lease that the org fecause other coi |ide interest-free imerican-createi I In 1998, the ai United Nations h [expected to climl than you can say Iresident Clintoi Bting to be emba E While self-righ delinquents ofth |bn forgets to me Sure of the United beast of burden. I Instead of payi iwe, we only reqi [is organization. Our insistence arts in Baghdad a ave drowned out he United States: Apparently bel found excuses th ancial obligation tedit for the sued [ions without payi |fedit bill. ■ The resultfWh