Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 5. 1968 PaeToT. IHGA AL . { j ,,,, f... Cutting the budget: Hit or miss Protest i Associated Press News Analysis WASHINGTON - The fine political art of hudget-cutting, practiced with great fanfare by Congress each year, is obscuring, the fact that congressional ap- propriations procedures are failing o keep pace with the growing complexity of the fed- eral budget. The budget has become so in- volved that some senators and congressmen who don't serve on the appropriations committees complain they don't know enough about the / budget amendments to vote intelligent- ly. Even committee members fre- quently understand them only in general terms. Last week, the Senate passed a money bill covering agricul- tural activities without know- ing how much spending it would generate in the coming year. A spending figure con- tained in a preliminary report was dropped, on aide said, be- cause no one was sure it was right. A special congressional re- form committee recommended two years ago that Congress employ computers and other modern techniques to assist it with the appropriations process.; But a Senate-passed bill to do this is stalled in the House Rules Committee. While provi- sions for extra trips home and additional electric typewriters for congressional offices have been passed separately, the c9mputerization proposal lies dormant. In the meantime, Congress is ready to pass a tax increase ac- companied by provisions to chop $10 billion from next year's appropriations and $6 billion from actual spending. The two figures differ since appropriated money can be spent over a period of several years. Congress, having decided cuts should be made, will let Presi- dent Johnson bear the burden of making them. The President said last month h gress should be do e thinks Con- cuts the budget by $1.4 billion ing this in its in appropriations; ,the Senate consideration of the appropria- tions bills. In the next breath, however, he said he doubts this wotild happen. As former chairman of an appropriations subcommit- tee, he knows the score. The reports accompanying such measures talk continually about economy and where the budget was cut. A close scrutiny gives a different picture. Take, for example, that agri- culture appropriation bill. -The House claims that its bill says its bill crops $16,9 million less from the appropriations. But the administration's bud- get contained $425 million for sales of loans in so-called par- ticipation sales certificates, and $460 million to reimburse base losses of the commodity credit corp., a government owned body. Both of these items are, in effect, only bookkeeping trans- actions shifting money between government funds. Thus they have no real impact at all on GLASSBORO SPEECH: LBJ asks Soviet aid to reach globalfpeace' spending. By deleting them, Congress saved nothing in cur- rent spending. The budget recommended also $917 million for the food- for-peace program. Congress cut all but $300 million from this, bringing the appropria- tions saving on these three items to just over 4$1.5 billion, more than the entire saving in the bill. It then added more than $100 million to the politically ,pop- ular soil and water conserva- tion programs. But the food for peace 'pro- gram can get more in various ways from things such as U.S.- owned currencies in foreign countries and carryover funds from the past. The House Appropriations Committee estimated that sav- ings in actual- spending from the food-for-peace cuts would be $361 million of the $414 mil- lion in spending it claims to have chopped from the agricul- 'ture budget. The Senate Appropriations Committee was unable to give a comparable figure. But the actual spending on the program probably will not be known until this time next year, as the 1969 fiscal year draws to a close. Sometimes the two houses juggle figures between each other. at MSU (Continued from Page 1) The purpose of the meeting and the ensuing march were to gain support for the protest and financial aid for those arrested, Monday. Bond was set at $10,000 for each; of the 11 students arrested for the sale of marijuana and at $5,000 for one student arrested for the sale of LSD. Students abandoned plans to visit all the dorms in order to receive police cooperation and as=. sistance for the march. A march leader, Brad Lang, commented that the counter- demonstrators "are angry but they haven't found a way to chan- nel their anger." arrests DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TheaDaily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer-' sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5 i Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar - "The Maangement of Manag- ers No. 60, North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Advanced Fire School II - Registra- tion, Civil Defense Center, 8:30 a.m., Mon., June 3. . General Synod of the Reformed Church in America - Registration, Wisconsin Civil Service - Research Analyst; Health Planning, BA math, stat., public health, or blol./soc. sci. plus 7 yrs. res. or stat. exper. or MA plus 5 yrs. Economic Development Con- sultant, considerable traveling, 4 va-. cancies, degree and 7 yrs. exper. re- lated to econ. or indust., plan. & dev. A Public Health Organization - As- sociate Public Health Statistician, M ork F, BS/BA, MS/MA, . MPH, Biol. dem- ography, biostat., soc. sci. plus courses in stat. or res. method. Pref. exper. Local Company - Clerical position,j woman, student wife, pref. H.S. busi- ness bckrnd. Standard Oil Company (Ohio), Cleve- land, Ohio - Constr. Engr., ;Proj.,Engr. Transportation, R & D Chemist, R& D' Automotive/Mechan. Engr., Econ. Anal., Asst. Food & Bev. Mgr., Jr. Audit., FId. Audit., FId. Rep., Chem. Sales, Sales & Tech. Serv., Staff Serv. Coord., Res. Asst., Transportation Econ. Anal. U.S. Army Materiel Command, Wash. D.C. - Employment Bulletin avail. at Bureau. Openings for college level engineering, scientific, maangement trainees. Openings in osparts of U.S. Extensive. descriptionis in this booklet. Majority are technical posi- tions, also for maangement. _...._ ...... _ _ __ . _ ._._. . ..r movies at I 11 Aeronautical Systems Division, Wright- Pla eme IPatterson, AFB, Ohio - Supervisory GENERL DIVSIONAerospace Engineer, airframe subsys- GENEAL I~iiQNtems for weapons, syst. BS in ME or Current Poslto Openings ReceivedI Aero E., exper. dey. variety aircraft, -bypleaserallviionb64-i74 fr tendpone min. 3 yrs. Resume form to be used, mation:a ureau. Thu Fr t 1 . GLASSBORO, N.J. (/P) - - President Johnson, returning to this 1967 summit site to encour- age closer working ties with the Soviet Union, urged yesterday that the two countries cooperate in achieving global peace and meaningful nuclear disarmament. Johnson was the commence- ment speaker at Glassboro State College - the campus where he held 10 hours of talks last June with Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. While there was reason to be- lieve Johnson would welcome an opportunity, before leaving office, to have a return conversation with Kosygin in some Soviet Glassboro, he made no mention of that possibility. But he placed heavy emphasis on hopes that, by working to- gether for man's good, the two countries can cause the cold war to fade away. Discussing current Vietnam talks in Paris, Johnson said Amer- ican negotiators "have met with little more than bellicose state- ments and evasions" from Hanoi. Ian trade Noting that the North Vietnam- ese demand a halt to all U.S. bombing of their country, John- son reiterated a stand he has con- sistently taken since negotiations became a possibility: "Until the men in Hanoi face the real prob- lems of ending the war, we must stand firm and fast." Johnson got a friendly reception from several thousand members of the graduating class, their families and townspeople. Yesterday morning the protest- Lobby, South Quad, 1:00 .pm.j ing students met at city hall to demostdentsettyirhalprtorh Botany Seminar: Dr. David Francis, demonstrate their support for the University of British Columbia will I Jen T1gO students who had been arrested, speak on "Differentiation in Slime Buster Campus police said they merely Molds," Wed., June 5, at 4:15 p in.,s assisted state and local officials 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg in making the arrests. Lt. D. E. Department of Speech University Stormer of the campus police ex- Players - G. B. Shaw's "Major Bar plained that the action of the bara", Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, B A force in this case was standard 8:00 p.m. B4l 1 Ayers procedure. Bill will sp "Instead of the police going in Doctoral Exams short time bef and making the arrests alone, we David John Broad, Communication STU came along with them," Stormer Sciences, Dissertation: "Some Physio- said. logical Parameters for Prosodic Descrip- tion," on wed., June 5 at 2 p.m. in ~ Rm. 3057 Admin. Bldg. Chairman: J. E. Shoup. I irsday, June 6th iday, June .th at 8:45 P.M. "ZERO FOR CONDUCT" Keaton in "COPS" l~ie Chaplin in "I1"" for 75c to benefit School Board Campaign peak and answer questionsa ore the films begin on Thursday GORDON on FRIDAY INAt: QSFN FR AC f!ffp GApe'I'1nHt . .. Israel, ,Jor4 gunfire near border (Continued from Page 1) raeli planes were shot down and seen crashing in flames west of the Jordan River, in territory oc- cupied by Israel during the 1967 war. Israeli sources reported no planes lost. At the United Nations, El-Far- ra and Tekoah gave their versions of the day's events in letters to U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Gold- berg, president of the UN Security Council for June. Neither asked for a council meeting. USE ROCKETS El-Farra said Israeli'forces used ground-to-ground rockets for the first time in the 20 years of Arab- Israeli hostilities. An Israeli army spokesman in Tel Aviv denied that such rockets were used. Tekoah said, "During recent days, Jordanian attacks across the River Jordan against Israeli vil- lages have become more frequent and intensive. The Jordanian gov- ernment is duty bound to put an imediate end to such breaches of the cease-fire." Goldberg conferred with El- Farra, Tekoah and several mem- bers of the 15-nation council. - In Amman, Jordanian Foreign Minister Dr. Abdul Moneim Rifai called in ambassadors of the Unit- ed States, the Soviet Union, Brit- ain and France to inform them of developments, Rifai also met with heads of Arab missions in Amman. The new outbrea lcame after increasing Arab resistance in ter- ritries occupied by Israel since the June 5-10 war last year, and a call for a massive Arab strike Wednesday throughout the west bank of the Jordan. An Israeli military communique isued in Tel Aviv said its fighter- bombers were in action for three hours hitting positions along a 121/2-mile front. All planes were reported to have returned safely. PRE-DAWN FIGHT The Israeli version of how the fighting started told of pre-dawn shellings at settlements south of Sea of Galilee, a common occur- rence there. By afternoon, the Israelis said, the firing shifted to farm settlements at Neve Or, Yar- dena, Gesher and Belt Yosef, all in the Beisan Valey, and Ashdot Yaacov in the Jordan Valley, where field laborers were allegedly shot at. The Israelis said seven or eight farms were hit along the battle- line which stretched from Afikim, south of the Sea of Galilee, to Belt Posef further south. The Israelis said they struck five enemy bat- teries. The fighting followed a state- ment by Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan to the Arab mayor of Hebron Monday stating that Jewish settlers would remain permanently in the Israeli-held Jordanian city and that the Is- raeli army would protect them. Jordan has asked the United Nations to take "effective steps" to keep the settlers out. i 'sssiran #itsi%3f8v::;+ i.':x:M,::: ;s':'" ; .':+1:;:sw ;+""## {ORGAN I ZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to offically recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in room 1011 SAB. University Lutheran Chapel, June 5. 8:30 p.m., 1511 Washtenaw. Discussion: "The Discipline of the New Life," 10:00 p.m., Devotion Service, by Pastor Kapfer. UM Rifle Club, Wed., 7:00-9:00 pani', ROTC Rifle Range, Shooting open to students and faculty. Bach Club Meeting, Thurs., June 6, 8:00 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe, Speaker: Dr. Richard Crawford, "Bach's Cantata No. 21" ('Ich hatte viel Bek- ummernis')" For further information call 769-2922, 761-1688 or 769-1605. David 0. Sekenick (who brotight you "Gone With the Wind" in 1936) presented in 1934- CHARLES D4CKENS' David Copperfield starring W. C. Fields! Friday &'Saturday 7:00 & 9:05 ARCH ITECTURE AUDTORIU 75co4l HELD OVER 2ND WEEK FOX £A RNTEATR ES~l 375 No. MAPLE RD. .7.69-1300 Et Mon.-Fri.700-:925 Sat. 2:25-4:30' Sun. 7:00-9:25 i -Associated Press President Johnson receives honorary robes at Glassboro ................... -.MIH-A DIAL 6-6290 ENDING TONIGHT ' Shows Today at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. 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