WEEKLY SPECIALS WES & THURS THE LATE GREAT SPAGETTI FEED! Every Tuesday and Thurs day from 8:30 till closing, all the spagetti you can eat PLUS a pitcher of beer, soft drink, or half carafe of wine per person. ONLY 4.95 WEDS & SUN Every Wednesday and Sunday you can get any single sauce spagetti din ner with bread for ONLY 2.95 AND NOW! WHEN YOU SHOW YOUR U OF O STUDENT ID YOU RECEIVE 20% OFF ANY DINNER NOT ALREADY DISCOUNTED. 725 W. 1st • 485-1919 National/Intemational Third World nations able to build missiles WASHINGTON (AP) — Proliferation of ballistic missiles is a growing threat as more Third World nations develop the ca(>ability to build the weapons, according to a congressional study. The report by the Congressional Research Service predicted “substantial numbers (of the missiles) could be deployed in most regions of the world in the not-too-distant future." Many of the nations with a potential to build the weapons are doing so as an offshoot of space programs, and often the technology has bean provided either by the United Stales or the Soviet Union. Many of the countries also have nuclear research programs, raising the specter of Third World nations armed with nuclear tipped missiles. The nations involved include Israel. Syria. Kgypt. Iraq, Libya, India. Pakistan. Taiwan, South Korea. North Korea. Brazil and Argentina, the study said. For purposes of the study, ballistic missiles are defined as self propelled. guided weapons that have a range “of many kilometers.” That separates them from shorter-range missiles such as shoulder-fired anti-aircraft weapons or plane-launched air-to-air missiles, which are widely available on the global arms market. The study predicted that “U.S. armed forces and those of our allies will, in the future, be confronted by hostile military forces in creasingly armed with ballistic missiles.” The study was prepared for the Senate Armed Services strategic and theater nuclear forces subcommittee, which has been studying U.S. efforts to develop defenses against non-nuclear ballistic missiles. The study noted that “some countries are on the verge pf achieving high accuracy and large.warheads with great destructive force, which would afford ah ability to eliminate pre-emptively key military forces of an opponent. This new-found capability can alter a regional balance of power.” It warned that "the trend toward ballistic missile proliferation in the Third World will probably present the United States with dif ficult policy questions.” COUPON COUPON April 30 10:00 • 4:00 167 EMU Catch It! Anomtd The Wtvtld in £iqlUu Wants Head of Budget Committee rejects conservatives’ plan WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Pete V. Domonici, chairman of (ho Senate Budget Committee. Sunday rejected a plan that con servative senators are drafting to bring a pending $) trillion fiscal 1987 budget more in line with what President Reagan wants. At the same time. Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore , chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said time is running out on the president's tax overhaul in itiative. Packwood said it is uncertain whether a majority of the panel will support his dramatic plan — no itemized deductions and a top personal rate of 25 percent — to revive the effort. “Can I get a majority of my committee to go along? I don't know because it means cutting off some of the favorite loopholes that, frankly, some of the very, very rich in this coun try utilize,” Packwood said on NBC's “Meet the Pruss " FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY for students and faculty west side FOREIGN AUTO O Maintenance & Repair 1069 W 3rd 484-4930 So far, tine White House ami the Seriate have been at odds over a budget for the fiscal year beginning Oct. , 1. .Reagan's budget proposals —' submitted toCongreS* in February — were turned down white a package drafter! by V bipartisan majority on the Senate Budget Commit tee lias been rejected by the administ|atlop. ''<>• The committee plan, which the Senate is considering, in eludes $1H-7 billion in tax in creases and cuts the president's military spending request by billion to meet a required $144 billion deficit target Domenici. K-N.M . also ap pearing on the NBC program, said there is only one way to avoid stalemate and automatic spending cuts under a balam aid-budget plan adopted last year: ''There will have to lie major compromises between the president ami the United States Congress " NO.1 IN TEST PREPARATION CLASSCS FORMING NOW AT 488-8000 —