Nation & world briefing Bush: ‘Little bitty’ tax cut just won’t do Bob Kemper Chicago Tribune LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KRT) — Turning up the pressure on a De mocratic opponent of his tax cuts, President Bush on Monday casti gated Congress for failing to act fast enough to approve the cuts that he said are particularly vital to small-business owners. “It’s time for them to move,” Bush told several hundred cheer ing supporters, chosen by the Arkansas Republican Party, at a campaign-style rally. “The proposal I outlined four months ago was designed to ad dress the specific weaknesses in our economy and to remove obsta cles that keep companies from hir ing workers,” he said. “Those ob stacles still exist. Congress needs to move.” Returning to the White House from his Texas ranch, Bush stopped in the home state of Sen. Blanche Lincoln, a Democrat who support ed the president’s 2001 tax cuts of #1.3 trillion over 10 years but wants to slash his new proposal. The White House is two votes short in the Senate for to pass a tax bill and is targeting Lincoln along with two Republican sena tors — George Voinovich of Ohio and Olympia Snowe of Maine — who refuse to back another huge cut on the grounds that it would drive the federal budget deeper into debt. Lincoln was invited to attend Bush’s event in Little Rock but, citing scheduling conflicts, she de clined. So far, there is no indication that the three are prepared to drop their opposition to the tax plan. Negotiations over the size and shape of the package continue on Capitol Hill. Bush did not name Lincoln, but he told listeners to urge their law makers to approve the largest tax package possible. “The Congress needs to hear from the people of Arkansas,” the president said. “Democracy can work, particularly when a lot of people get on the phone or by e mail and just let them know what’s on your mind.” Bush is intensifying pressure on the Republican-controlled Con gress to implement new tax breaks, which are the centerpiece of his domestic agenda. He wants at least #550 billion in cuts over 10 years, but the Senate is threat ening to reduce the package to #350 billion. “The good news is that the de bate has shifted from no tax relief to how much tax relief,” Bush said. “Congress needs to move. They need to move boldly. We don’t need ... a little bitty tax-relief plan. We need one that is strong and robust.” The president portrayed the cuts as a jobs arid growth package needed to invigorate the ailing economy despite some econo mists’ belief that most of the pack age is focused in the long term and would create little economic activity and fewer jobs over the next year. Also, to counter criticisms that the tax cuts would mainly benefit the wealthiest taxpayers, Bush is trying to present his proposal as a boon to small-business owners, who often pay individual income taxes at the highest rates. Such businesses would generate most of the jobs the country needs to re cover, he said, so aiding them would help economic growth. “Tax policy needs to encourage positive decision-making in the small-business sector because small businesses are the lifeblood for new employment,” the presi dent said. After unofficially kicking off his re-election campaign with a na tionally televised speech from aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln last week, Bush is expected to step up travel plans to promote his domestic agenda and lay the groundwork for next year’s campaign. While he spends much of his time talking about the war on ter rorism and his role in its success, Bush is primarily trying to con vince Americans that he knows their economic problems. “We have got challenges here at home, to make sure that our econ omy is strong enough so people can find work,” he said. Bush had been scheduled to meet Monday with Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien in Ottawa. But the White House “postponed” the trip after Canada opposed the war in Iraq, saying the president was too busy with the Iraqi war to travel. Instead, Bush met at his ranch near Crawford, Texas, this week end with Australian Prime Minis ter John Howard, a staunch sup porter of the Iraqi invasion. “The reason why we welcomed them there is because Australia is an important ally of ours,” Bush told the crowd Monday. “The Australians fought beside our forces in Iraq.” © 2003, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Scientists look into Midwestern storms Robert S. Boyd Knight Ridder Newspapers WASHINGTON (KRT) — Govern ment and university scientists an nounced Monday a major study of why big, violent storms occur and how they can be predicted. The study will cover the Midwest thunderstorm zone from South Dako ta to Ohio, using radar-bearing aircraft and ground-based mobile laboratories. It begins May 20 and runs through July 6 under the direction of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. The scientists will investigate huge thunderstorm complexes that can spread hurricane-force winds and tor rential rains for hundreds of miles. These monsters sometimes spin off tornadoes, like those that killed at least 34 people in Kansas, Missouri and Ten nessee this week. The $4 million study was in the works long before this week. “This (project) is a once-in-a-life time experience,” said Ron Przybylin ski of the St. Louis office of the National Weather Service. “The more knowl edge we have about the evolution of these systems, the better we can pre dict them.” Most ordinary summer storms are bom and die in an hour or two and span about 12 miles. But these large systems — known as mesoscale con vective vortices — can be 500 miles long and 90 miles wide. They typically develop in the late afternoon and can last all night, bringing winds up to 100 miles an hour and intense rainfall. FRANKLIN, KS - Robin Dixon walks through the remains of her home in Columbus, Kansas, after severe weather and a tornado hit the area on Monday. 1 Brian Com i Wichita Eagle “The effects are like a land hurri cane,” said Christopher Davis, co leader of the project at the research center. Even after one of these storms de cays, its low-pressure vortex may per sist and give rise to a new storm the next day. Several days of storms may trail one another across the central and eastern United States. These storms sometimes give rise to tornadoes at their leading or trailing edge, as happened Sunday and Monday. More typically, dam age from superstorms is due to high winds and floods. One such vortex that began in South Dakota in July 1977 traveled 1,000 miles east and produced a cata strophic flood that killed 78 people in Johnstown, Pa., according to Steve Nelson, program director for mesoscale meteorolology at the Na tional Science Foundation. Between January 1995 and July 2000, high winds from mesoscale storms caused $1.4 billion in damages, 72 deaths and 1,000 injuries, accord ing to the National Oceanic and At mospheric Administration, which op erates the Weather Service. The study will be carried out aboard three airplanes, based in St. Louis, that will track developing storms by flying in and around them as the storms move eastward across the Midwest. Meanwhile, ground-based crews in mobile lab oratories will deploy weather bal loons and other instruments to sample the storm environment. Researchers have been using com puter simulations to try to understand how these storm clusters work, but un til now there have been no large-scale data-gatheringprojects. “We’d gone about as far as we could with the idealized simulations,” said Morris Weisman, co-leader of the proj ect at the atmospheric research cen ter. “We needed to get good data. ” © 2003, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. News brief White House blocks release of information on terrorism warnings WASHINGTON — The Bush ad ministration and the nation’s intelli gence agencies are blocking the re lease of sensitive information about the Sept. 11,2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Penta gon, delaying publication of a900-page congressional report on how the ter rorist assault happened. Intelligence officials insist the infor mation must be kept secret for nation al security reasons. But some of the in formation is already broadly available on the Internet or has been revealed in interim reports on the investigation, leading to charges that the administra tion is simply trying to avoid enshrin ing embarrassing details in the report. Disputed information includes a well-publicized warning from an FBI agent that al-Qaida supporters might be training in U.S. flight schools and the names of the president and his na tional security adviser as people who may have received warnings that a ter rorist attack was possible before Sept. 11,2001, one official said. “We’re trying to keep in this report some matters that have been talked about in public, discussed in newspa pers, and not to do that flies in the face of common sense,” Rep. Porter Goss, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said on Monday. —Frank Davies, Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) 016436 Applying Psychology to the Real World Department of Psychology, Summer Session, 2003 Join us for an exciting summer of Psychology! Our summer classes are small and are geared towards investigating^real life issues. Course offerings include: Human Sexuality • Psychoactive Drugs • Psychology of Trauma • Psychology of Gender • Perception • Psychopathology • Explore Consciousness. Several courses also fulfill social science, science and multicultural requirements. Registration begins Monday, May 5, 2003. For a complete course listing and more information, please visit our web page: http://psychweb.uoregon.edu/summer Premier Travel • Eugene Airfare Specials! Cabo - $288.00* Cancun - $408.00*' London - $578.00*1 *tax & agency fee not included, restrictions I may apply. Subject to change without notice. 1 Eurail Passes issued on-site! E-mail: fares@luv2travel.com Oregon My Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Friday dur ing the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently ot the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. 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