Show & t 1 Nielson Hansen Vote Against !nee !nee By Thomas H Gorey Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINGTON — Here's how Intermountain area members of Congress voted on key issues Oct SENATE! — Passed 66-3- 3 a $500 billion Aug ore for avis e of plan that has been called a budget because of its lack of specifics The measure approved by the House on a 250-16- 4 vote one day earlier (see House vote below) sets overall spending ceilings and reve deficit-reductio- 2 - - '' - - : n - - - - 1 v4 !71::::::it 4e ::: : - rrolloppil1i :::i:::171"00PP910144: i ' ' i : : 0 7777 01itsili I b !: b i 1 l' - : I: :i t ' ' '' i ::'1 'tA r i':: For 1 i LI lp 15ii :::2::::::: !7)It': "t : ' rtmgeoWOIV 1 visit and Custom idea Book 24 HOURS A DAY a Free AS SNE 35°I!) 4'11 t4rit The Department of Housing and Urban Development has named Ken Linda Murphy HUD Region VIII Managers of the Year The award is given according to HUD "in recognition of cooperative spirit and devotion to high profes- sional standards in the operation of subsidized housing" o:ro QVADaRtil :ftibitz (41olte 0 01(1 4 01 MEEMME klIMMMINIIIIIII d cnUI aoth Saturday October 20 It was presented at the Association d of HUD Management Agents gion VIII annual meeting in Denver Mr and Mrs Murphy employees of the Tamarack Property Manage ment Company are resident managers of Friendship Manor 1320 E 500 South It is a 228-unelderly complex The beginning of college life is Each year nearly half of all college undergraduates receive some form of financial assistance Projected total for the 1990-9- 1 school year is $295 billion enough to cover about 40 percent of the nation's $76 billion higher education bill It's anything but easy money though Applying for financial aid means coping with strict deadlines cumbersome paperwork jarring jargon and rules that sometimes defy logic and common sense Does this mean you should avoid applying for financial aid? Most experts say no The financial aid system can be surprisingly generous It does however make sense to apply to one or more "financial safety" schools — where you know you can afford the cost In the meantime in a special issue of Money magazine "America's Best College Buys" there are suggestions for ways to increase your eligibility: — Do not save money in your child's name Under the financial aid formula youngsters contribute a far higher percentage of their savings than parents do — Cash in investments You are expected to kick in a much higher proportion of your income than of your assets — Use a home-equit- y loan to pay off your debts — Contribute to a 40Ik IRA or Keogh plan — Keep a lid on your youngster's earnings — Spend the student's money first — Let's say your child has been e school accepted at his but you're unhappy with the financial aid package What can you do? Sometimes there is room for negotiation Federal regulations allow financial aid officers to exercise "professional judgment" in individual cases first-choic- pima al os 01 owl nth it gf 6 A Offering degrees In: 1011 ITI: p : t Li -- - Unit) !114::tr ‘‘ : - - aro ed 0 will ingi owni )I O (1) 5 0 gml Illi 111( i -- Iti-- Uth4kW9Web08W"ONNOWa1Nilft-Al&- 581-994- I 8411 I A9----- 4- t t I I today: 4 CAREER PREPARATION SERVICES pose pc tatl o a 581-994- 4 itt—- 10 —:j"': -' ''' i t i i LAST YEAR MONTANA TECH PLACED 95 OF ITS GRADUATES AVERAGE STARTING SALARY FOR ENGINEERS - $29323 ""''''"1 EDUCATION IN A HIGHLY PERSONALIZED YOU GET A HIGH-TECSTUDENT FACULTY RATIO 15:1 ENVIRONMENT 1800 STUDENTS H - COST TO (UTAH RESIDENTS) ON & FEES ROOM & BOARD BOOKS & SUPPLIES 1990-9- 1 PROGRABIS " :::::::: 0 ENGINEERING o CHECK IT si RECOGNIZED AS "THE BEST SMALL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY COLLEGE IN THE US" - US NEWS AND WORLD REPORT (1987) vf for College" "Money Guaranteed Results (BS) CHEMISTRY :SCIENCE ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING GEOLOGICAL ENGINEERING GEOPHYSICAL ENGINEERING METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING' : :MNING:ENGINEtING:":':':-V:PETROLEUM ENGINEERING TECIDIOLOGY AND ': BUSENTESS DEVELOPMENT FOR INFORMATION 0 I I I cD v '2 1 P I 2i c5 Q Cl — 8- compunat '':::Ii':::::::'::: ':- SaENcE:1:i:::: MATHEMATICS OCCUPATIONAL AND IIEALTH sArEr i ' '' !- --) socrEry AND nteiliCgctiktOlien TECHNOLOGY v i - voisitlf -- rt-- Soot ' : i : '0 ti1 1! t : A ADMISSIONS OFFICE MONTANA TECH BUTTE MT 59701 CONTACT: I 0 0 best test prep company Stanley H Kaplan g For 50 years Kaplan's techniques have prepared over one million students boosting their scoring power and test confidence So call Kaplan Why go to just any school when you can go to the one you want? zua2 ts 05 T iii ml g 0 46 tt P- tu IZ t) tè 44 ts ''Z g z i0 '64 8 pu Elpr2Lariat e THE WORLDrS LEADING TEST PREP ORGANIZATION c) 3 8 a5' g4 ulta szz : M Et E 0Ls 6 (i) t gE to tsr1 -i cto U tn v STANirt N KARAM minnow Salt Lake Center Provo Center D na 0 e ri CI niMP lif I LIMO OM OM ME IMO OM ME C- f 1 IL Game Port VGA Graphics Card (Monitor Not Included) -- 360 or 720 K Floppy Drive 150 Watt Power Supply 8 Expansion Slots 101 Style Keyboard -- 2g 4J 15-- Quality Computer Products and Service Since 1975 5 MI sas 1611411 kft STARTING AT ONLY 3631444 coupon coupon per student ITTIOD 640 K RAM — 10 mhz Clock Calendar — SerialParallel Ports — - ‘Lau : 4 7- with this 1 4('' ill1A Preparation of your choice 0 1g bt 1C:!""1 $50 OFF ONE TEST 5 0 i - XTC FOR STUDENTS & HOME USE ammt 226-720- 't - ' test-takin- cz (I) 1 Of course you may get into some other school but why settle? 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Paralegal Computerized Accounting Travel 4 Tourism Word Processing 0 111001 CiP) JOB If you chose yea Vj ege Membership in a good fraternity or sorority Lots of great football weekends True intellectual stimulation A nice variety of dates Memories to last a lifetime 02 03 04 05 Grants Williams-Colema- Most freshmen have had a mother and father to help structure their lives Their high school routine was ATTEND (1) R-I- present Highland High School 1 & control" Guarantee the college of your choice "C$ ftelii an I fraught with challenges: how to share a room with a stranger now to find your way around a F trange place how to budget time I) allow for classes study laundry and football games It's often the bright students who have the most difficulty managing their time experts say Lois W ark coordinator of career counseling in the school of science at Purdue University knows students like that "There are some who are very bright but who never had to study or never had to crack a book They think they can get by without good learning skills" These students however suddenly find themselves enrolled in a tough college competing with others who have learned good study habits "Those who have learned how to study vvill outstrip the brighter ones every time I've seen some very very bright kids go down the drain because they never needed to study and didn't learn how It's a real tragedy" Wark says 64-36- 1 amendment aimed at quelling the furor over NEA's funding of controversial works by Robert Mappleth lives If they allow time to manipulate them then they have lost all Afewtips on Study skills are imporfant financial aid for 'students Under the n Voting for the Rohrabacher o Re-an- - amendment: Hansen Nielson Craig Vucanovich Thomas : Owens Stallings Voting against: Bilbray — Rejected an amendthat ment of Rep Phil Crane ll to NEA the abolish During sought floor debate Rep Crane argued that "if we want to permit the greatest flexibility of freedom in promotion of the arts leave it where it belongs — in the private sector and get govout of it altogether" Voting for the Crane amendment Vucanovich Voting against: Hansn Nielson Owens Craig Stallings Bilbray Thomas Nielson Owens Craig Stallings Thomas — Approved 382-4- 2 a measure that would authorize $175 million for the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) in fiscal 1991 The legislation — an amendment sponsored and by Reps Pat Williams — would Thomas Coleman require the chairman of NEA to ensure that the awarding of arts grants takes into consideration "general standards of decency" hland High School 2166 S 1700 East Salt lake City Utah H Williams-Colema- lbray Voting to uphold the veto: Hansen two-thir- d amendment: Nielson Owens Stallings Bilbray Thomas Voting against: Hansen Craig Vucanovich — Rejected 175-24- 9 an amendment of Rep Dana Rohrabacher RCalif that would have prohibited the NEA from funding any works that depict human sexual or excreictions in a "patent-tha- t organs or involve "denioffensive way" grating the beliefs tenets or objects of a particular religion" that encourage or coerce children into "sexually explicit conduct" that portray the American flag in a "defaced physically defiled' or similar condition or that use "any part of an actual human embryo or fetus" Rep Williams charged that the amendment was "copper-rivete- d ironclad censorship of the first de" gree 2 8 wAH A &it NEA-funde- two-thir- 3 Rocky Mountain Association of College Admissions Counselors artists orpe and others whose works are found to be obscene by a court would have to repay the grant money Critics of the amendment denounced it as a "fig leaf' that would do nothing to stop federal subsidies for offensive art Voting for the Craig Vucanovich Thomas Not voting: Hansen — Failed to override 275-15- 2 President Bush's veto of a bill that would have limited the growth of textile and clothing imports to one percent a year (using 1989 as the base year) Bill proponents fell 10 votes short of the majority needed to override The Senate passed the textile-quot- a 68-3bill last July by a veto-promargin making it imperative for President Bush to prevail in the House In upholding the president's veto the House killed the textile legislation for the third time in five years In 1985 and 1988 the chamber sustained former President Reagan's vetoes of similar quota bills Despite the defeats bill supporters intend to push the legislation next year Rep a critic of the bill Phil Crane said "Three strikes and you're out may be the rule in baseball but not necessarily on Capitol Hill" Voting to override the veto of the textile-quot- a bill: Vucanovich Bi- HUD Recognizes Couple for Devotion C- twoolloo 'k4ct ‘SI t4' 14 414gtTclotAtioet ' ' 'b E ' Ikr: n2F111441- - littlirorou 1 1Wrste budget Congress approved a stopgap funding bill over the three-da- y Columbus Day weekend to try to avert a government shutdown but the president vetoed that measure The House failed to override the veto (see House vote below) HOUSE: : tzt ::::31::'::::!:::::4'''':!: Steve Malcolm Wallop Before passing the 4 "r ::: :::::C:::::::::::::: - ' a budget Oct 5 by a vote of 179-25- 4 package worked out by the Bush White House and congressional leaders The repudiated plan contained $134 billion in tax hikes Voting for the budget resolution: Seas Jake Garn and Orrin Hatch both James A McClure Harry M Reid and Richard H Bryan both Alan K Simpson 3 C 4 i ::::::: ::' I H A CALL igO? :''':: i'''' Congress passed the unspecific measure after the House rejected on — Passed by voice vote a stopgap spending bill to keep the federal government funded through Oct 19 while congressional committees fill In the blanks of the approved budget outline The House also passed the temporary spending bill on a 362-vote (see House vote below) Ill caii1r ' oi!it oiiwi woo F tatistoort''''' : ' ::: H1 t ! : w- V 3i Ai t'ir: t' I piiiVII'''''t '1 Budg'et Voting to uphold the veto: Nielson — Passed 250-16a n $500 billion measure The unspecific budget resolution sets overall spending ceilings and revenue-raisin- g targets leaving congresit to Democratic-controllesional committees to write the implementing details Voting for the budget resolution: RichReps Wayne Owens James H Bilard Stallings bray Voting against: Reps James Hansen and Howard Nielson both RBarbara Utah Larry Craig F Vucanovich Craig Thomas — Passed 362-a stopgap spending bill to keep the federal government funded through Oct 19 while congressional committees fill in the blanks of the unspecific budget resolution approved by Congress Voting for the stopgap funding bill: All eight Intermountain Area representatives — Failed to override 260-13President Bush's veto of a stopgap spending bill that Congress passed Columbus Day over the three-da- y weekend in an effort to avoid a government shutdown The override attempt fell six votes shy of the remajority quired Voting to override the veto of the stopgap spending bill: Owens Stallings Bilbray deficit-reductio- ticulars Symms ''511tit16 - 01k i::: congression- Voting against: Sens it 14ft4-4i- e— :z: i itpf: t ' targets leaving it up to d al committees to determine the par : 1: 1 :i i! iou0 Liiolilyiv !o i I i ' : r: iii! b I ))Il11 ! i Deficit-Reducin- g Till-in-the-Blan- ks' flue-raisi- Democratic-controlle- B15 1 Hatch Owens Support Garen Ms two lace The Salt Lake Tribune Sunday October 14 1990 "maw 00 tt - ' r tl: "Megui sl 0i I Ill a I) t 1'1 ' t i 1 1 frit:xi I I ' i4pri1 )10:k t : ' so - 111 I ( - 6- 1 i t j :VOT-ip- t ti - vohAlot-aki- 04fa40ahiffh - g - j: :J 1 LU |