........ ^ idaho SlSuper Lottitery’f test runr —: 6iS'-^Chooosing betWiveen collecges — D)1 B H S s a s s a ■ Montana s ta te 75 ;- B.Y.U.67 CSI .110 , . Idaho 70 - ~- r -_ Northeni AArizbna 6 8 1 u' q ^ ..A. 94 ' Mo - -eolor»*'-s^atfr52-52------^ --------- RIcka College 104 COT ETWashlngtoh!hST : Boise Statite61 — jtireyjr8irStata'80 ------|'Mo^ontaria-72 -MlasourL104_____3 Z New M exico StaState 81 Kansas 855y I Syracu: u s e 9 5 ____ ,1 3 e F -,,„ ,— _ Ite 6 C ^ o ra d o 8B ~~ ~ ; Uteh State 1^3~ ~ ~ Tfatigas SBg t e 57 I G eorgtg e t b w n 76 I t o 3 5 3 ■ imFi TSK?i g s 3 rr2 0 ~ 1 9 9 G --------------- - 0 5 t h yyear, t No.' 28 — — Twin Fallsridaho- -------------SundayrJancrary- |M a g{ic Vailley leg[islator rs i facc! toughll road on waay ^ to'frandirQr t e c a t ____ By M ICHELLE Cqi'O LE Idaho^ project aren’t really co:competing for Times-News vmdTr .. die same precious few■ doldollars. L i s l a t u r e - Tlie Singing BridgeJge is funded B O IS E -T h c protroblems arc as plain r through a state criticalal libridges fund as a pothole in thec roadn or thc bridge IBrI ■ \t i 1990 ■ and through the state; hihighway sys- that can't sustainlin a fire truck’s lein. Tlie Clear Lake GradeGm is main- . weight. Yet, so faifar, legislators arc ity o f‘738 73 fdahoans surveyed this fa<lfai tained by lhe We.sl PoiiPoint Highway just plain stymied.. want the stale to spend more mone;icy District, although localal bbusiness and _________ - How con thcy shashake enough mon- maintainIaining roads and bridges, county represenlatives; Iwhave asked the cy_from_the_statejie_budgel. to repair Thec NlMagy Valley shares thnt conon- Slate Transportation Boar)oard to add tlio________ Bulil's Clear Lakecc Grade and Twin ccm. "S_» S iw percent of the 104'locacal grade lo the stale highwa>way .'iysleiii. ( r^j.- Falls’ Singing Bridg<dge? residents;nts surveyed by BSU pollsterlers But wiih lawmakerss didivvying up * "I don't think; aat this point wc placcdd rcroads and bridges second onl;nly S125 million ,election->un-year ^budget could put a bill on1 eieither o fthose two to publicblic education on a spending pripri- suiplus, local legislators)rs tor county of- projects through thithe Joint Financc- ority listlist. They put road needs aheacad ficials could suddenly/ HrIlnd they have Appropriations CcCommittee.” said of highci^ cr education, law cnforcemerleni some money for one projiproject - but nut ■ •. iStatc Scn.'Joycc MeMcRobcn.<h R-Twin andsi:ni(enior citizens programs, both. iwn If lhal happens, "TheThere will ccr* - l O l '-'t ' .................. 5 = 3 -ffliis.- Goulduld said she can’t walk dow J8URY doesn’t mealean McRoberts. or Buhl’s’s !Main Street.wilhoul pcopliple lainly be a dogfight" betvbetween the two - • r other membcrs o■f f thet Magic yailcy sloppingling-to xsk her when ihey ure gcgo— projed's biickers, Twinwin Falls City_____ . H6rse~poww er I legislative delegalioIlion, will quit try- ing to3 scsee some improvements on ilithe Engineer Gary'Young’ .sai .said. Clear• U ke Grade, a route used dailaiiy ^Two bills introduceded iin the House _ ^ _ RhinHiTig ntnp a gtwfgtwfV fif hiiy, Kevin Ellia driveivcs.bia yearsdurmg wintCT montha to feed caitle at the ipg- ~~ — “ W c’re waiting-t(t-to Ict the pot boil- b y comiommercial -tmcks, fann equi{jip- -• last week propose giving/ing surplus d o l- ----------- Pf-^ .Tli-mn niflrCS EC Uiis I i a s '~ r a n a i b c r u n s r ^•e story'^photoesi <m pago Bl I near hia borne by Carey. ElUi for a whUc, said"id“Siatc -R cp.-C clia-m ent amand'sclioolbuses. --------------------------lars-lo-citieK.-couniics-;ics-and-highway--------- - bf r n twrng the mTtTMlB every day for the pastast four -G ould, R-Buhl. ""W \ e've gol some-. Twin/in Falls businesses and truckci<ers districts to spend on1 hiIiigliways and I, ideas.'' -- - .......... - who.rcl;rcly.on.tiK Singing Bridge asIS a bridges. And while thcthey 'migl'il be A public opinionon poll released last major■r trtraffic,anery are equally an:mx- popular with lhe public,lie. tthe proposals^ | . X week indicates thaihat lawmakers, had ious to jsec.thc bridge fixed - thouj.ugh w on’t have an easy linlime making il 1 1 1 better have somee iiideas. Boise Sl^itc il’s notslot slated for repair until 1993. ihrough jhe Legislatureire._ ._ .................. Budgett to claiiim big d<Ieficit Cl Upivcrsity researcluchers found a majl)r- Asi iljils stands now. thc two lococal . Sec PROJECTSS o n P a g e A 2 The Associated Press overview writtiritten by Budget Director jectiections and who spoke on cor:ondition ^ Richard Q.’ DcDarman, who likens the hatthat their names not bc used. The budget forecasts thc deficficit will / ■ ive haulints ;et to thc “Ultimate Cook- Tl rbing dri President federal budget tax-cur WASHINGTON — Bush's Sl.23 tnllion budgetIget, due to bc ie Monster” — the voracious gremlin beJC reducedr to S25.1 billion in 1 9 ^ ' unveiled Monday, will seeksee to slash on the “Sesameimc Street’-’ television pro- mdand will actually show a surpliplus of g J the federal deficit in halff inin 1991, ad- gram. S5.755.7 billion in 1993, thc ye; ministration sources said1 StSaturday, in Wilh a geni;encrally rosy set of as- Gnujramm-Rudman law calls for state> spendiing planIS of ’9(>0s a spending plan ba^d onn pipared-down sumptions ab<about economic growth anccmeed budget. It projects furth<ther sur* ds for explanations of why Gojo v . when the grovvih nmiins s out." Senate defense outlays and optin'itimistic eco- and with a hohost o f proposed cuts in jplusIuscs of $10.7 billion in 199994 and The.Associaled PrePress mands i il Andrus declined to rccorom- Finance Chaimian AAtwell Parry nomic assumptions. military andI ddomestic spendiiig pro- S9.459V4 billion ih'1995. ' Cecil / /an - says. iis campaign^ grams, the admdministration projects that •FormerF( President Ronald ReaganP BOISE — LcLegislative budget mendd eeven larger amounls for vai ' Bush, sticking to his . The cause of that wnwreck would be deficit goal the deficit for)r I1991 will bc reduced to ilsoalso submitted budgets showin'ing sur- w nters arc nearinging the end of this ouspro]programs. pledge, will meet his de is a the overiooked law lhalihai lies genenil crease, opting $63.1 billion,1, jjust under the S64 bil- jplusIuscs down the road, but thc sisurplus- year's hearings on0 a 1991 stale B ulliit lurking in the background is • without a general tax jncrci rtlie txx spending lo Uic: prprojected total lg_of_dollars_|ion_de{icit taita ^ e t established in the csni;<i never materialized because ththe.eco:_spcnding- blueprintint.-awasJi_in_morc_law..sp2 spawned by.lhc.IiL^cvolt of tl _____ ipstcadliQ_snv.c_billibng-' 1970s, lhal could slam illhe personal income for the state. through trimming a variety:ty <o f govern-' Gramm-RudmtIman deficit reduction nomlomic assumptions upon wHicHich the revenue then thcyry 1have had to work lale 19 breaksks on spending in sessionss to In thc wake o f the; HiI97X One Per-. menf programs, ranging5 frfrom M edi- law. reve•cvenue and spending forecastssts were with in years, sessions ihat saw come,c. aand thal prospect could easiisily cent Initiative thatI vvoters hoped , ‘ care to collcge studeni loansians. Thc administlistration projects a dcficit basejased proved too -optimistictic and Unlike past se; legislative largesse before UiisUi would put the clam p) on rising pn)p- The budget document,t, BBush's’ first for the currentent fiscal year of S123.8 CongressCon balked at going alonj)ng wilh agency bureaucratsals forccd to justify curb lej caled-down versions session,on ends. erty taxes. fi.scally constonservative .stale solo effort to reorder thithe govern- billion, far abO'bove the Gramm-Rudman mannany o f the program cuis. lhe governor's scah honestly believe we're lookir<ing lawmakers pushed ihroihrough the .bjlj ment's spending priorities,ies, also will target o f SIOOM) 1billion, according to of-. ■ ManyM analysts believe a simil[lilar (ate o f thcir budget reqii;qucsts, the hearings “1 ho: irain wreclc in a year or iw • . See PLANS ono n :P a g e A2 contain a somewhatt ■ whimsical ficials who havhave-seen the budget pro* • See CUT on Pago AA2 • this month have bobeen marked-by dc* at a tni Bush COUuld do sorrTie good )y followin;ig Sullivan’I’s.lead Biting bandiiit nipping ataway , ■ Presiesident Bush, understands thche message. For if * ^aight-Ridder ig | New Service The latest victim iss JcJesus Tom:s. _ ; __By_DAVlD.lGNATIt[S_i ilpitofthe'prcsidcn:^------ ---------29rnnigrant-faTTn-worworker. Torres - ........ The Washington Post — A n a l y/S si IS anyoyone could use the bully pulpi • cy tcto good eficct,-it?s George BuBush. H e’s im- ’ hHOMESTEADrFla.C — .The BBit- was walking home — maybe 20 ' ; year in office. Tlie ing b He j-ards from police’jieadi,eadqu;iners — WASHINGTON — Lou..ouis W. Sullivan, the sec- town'st< slick and sinister adverIvertising proposes in- mensnscly popular after his first yc g Bandjt is still nipping away. I kc and tm st him. All got v ' be* when the bandit asked.xd.him for 50 retary o f Health and Humajman L Services, taught steadsi a greater degree o f prfrscirsonal irresponsibili- Amemerican people obviously like )t victim 12 strolling directly fc ing-with that popu- hind i 1.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages36 Page
-
File Size-