Show October 3 1973 Fags 12 Senate critics assault defense appropriations Preparation Committee before additions were made on the floor The Senate added $495 million for the purchase of 50 additional fi4 fighter aircraft for the Navy and Marine Corps The House reached a $204 billion total $15 billion under By HARRISON HUMPHRIES Associated Press Writer Senate critics of increasing defense spending girded Monday for a final assault on a $21 billion weapons authorization bill The measure also calls for a reduction of 110000 in the number of US troops overseas Votes were scheduled on a $750 million overall cut proposed by Sen Hubert H Humphrey and an alternative $500 million reduction advocated by Va Sen Robert C Byrd D-of Senate nine During days budget request by voting to require the Defense Department to make $950 million in overall reductions Differences in the House and Senate versions will have to be resolved in conference com- W debate porters Nixon’s President mittee administration supwere successful in The Senate bill would require withdrawal of 110000 land based defeating proposed curtailment US from troops overseas of specific weapons systems stations by Dec 31 1975 inSen Strom Thurmond R- - SC cluding 40000 by June 30 1974 It note to undo the Senate also would require a reduction of urged months of congressional scrutiny 156100 in the overall active duty of individual programs with a strength of the Army Navy and “meat-a- x approach” that he Air Force by next June 30 called impractical and dangerous Both houses approved $15 to national security billion for continuing the Navy’s Sen William Proxmire for schedule accelerated of on the other hand construction and development argued that defense spending must be the Trident submarine system curtailed if the national budget is The Senate voted $11 billion for to be held within limits without 25 the purchase of 77 F15 aircraft for to 40 per cent cuts in such with 39 the Air Force programs as child nutrition allowed by the compared House forest protection health services The Senate bill strips $100 and education million from the $4735 million Byrd defended his $500 million cut propo-amerely restoring requested by the administration the bill to the $204 billion voted for the B1 bomber development by the Senate Armed Services program D-W- is For Problems appearing in SI LEX program e Help-Lin- service starts Re: Training to Help-Lin- e Begin Contact: Chip Rawlins ext or Dr Val Christensen 7119 Training sessions to prepare volunteers for service with Help Resource Line and the Walk-iCenter will begin Thursday n October 11 at The training formation resources 7 pm will on in the UC offer in- community and exercises to individual stimulate designed awareness and the ability to listen and communicate Training will include four group sessions scheduled Applications by supplemented programs are available in Dr Christensen’s office Rm 220 UC ce Any experienced volunteers who haven’t been contacted should leave their names and phone numbers with Dr Christensen’s secretary s WW agBflgBgggHaaaaqn Kaiparowits plant site may change Utah “I don’t think the secretary has changed his position” said a ROTC Saturday - Oct 6 9:00 am - 3 pm Smithfield Range Demonstrations of and M-1- Rifle 6 Machine Gun Refreshments M-6- 0 - basis for the interest SILEX program Initiated Learning (Student a offered has Experience) ago the He said he wanted to make it number of classes ranging from a course on ffy tying to investing for fun and profit clear he wasn’t advocating a Free University because the SILEX program works through the proper curriculum channels But he stressed that unless the administration contributes to the program monatarily they don’t really have a say in what courses are taught And he said he didn’t want the program to be well advertised as far as recruiting because the students should be the initiators of classes But certain problems have arisen with the program and there are varying ideas as to their solutions Grant Protzman ASUSU said he academic two thinks there are problems to be dealt with if the program is to survive vice-preside- nt Said Edwards “We don’t want the program to become institutionalized” Protzman said the program was now being administered by the General Education department and he felt it was a burden on that department to handle Edwards said he also felt the students should pay for the services they receive That is if a teacher requires pay for his time it is up to the students to arrange for that pay Along this line Edwards said “It should maybe be put on the basis of the extension service Let the students ' pay for the However Dr Farrell Edwards coordinator of General Ed differed in his viewpoint Dr Edwards was one of the original members of the committee that approved SILEX and he said that he and his secretary see the added work as part of their job He said he was more than glad to have the program handled courses” Sometimes departments don’t want to teach a class so the SILEX program takes up the cause The department then may provide a competent instructor so the class will be competently taught Edwards in expressing his doubts that the program will die from lack of funding said that he even wondered if too much involvement of the Associated Students of USU would be good for the program Edwards said his office has the responsibility of making sure that every time a class is offered those departments interested must be notified and their permission secured He listed this as another of his department’s responsibilities Protzman of the program” through his office of the Representatives club Sierra and the Interior said Department Monday that the Kaiparowits coalfired steam plant is unlikely to be built at the original proposed site in Southwestern Sponsored by Army were to instruct on an overload Since its inception four years said his major concern was for the lack of funding given the program He planned to submit a proposal to the executive senate today to match any funds the administration will give up to $400 He said this money will be used to assist students and teachers in printing and obtaining class materials and in paying those teachers who require it Planet history department spokesman Interior Secretary Rogers CB Morton said in June that he would disapprove the project because of considerations environmental Industry groups backing the project are seeking review of the department’s decision Richard Lahn of The Sierra Club said after the meeting the —Somewhere over Protzman said he thought if ‘They are apparently going to southern hemisphere Canada’s college credit was being given it look at a range of alternative should have some funding from dustbin in the sky is lost sites” The Canadian-buil- t bustbin was the administration and he said Lahn said The Sierra Club he felt more a in contained giant US16 advertising should requested the meeting after be done for the program designed funnel towed about that learning miles into the sky by a US atindustry met with the representatives mospheric-balloon Edwards on the otber hand A National Research Council department officials last week to said he would rather not see official discuss the project here says the balloon is After the industry meeting funding come from the adprobably down — its Sen Wallace F Bennett ministration tracking controls dead said there was room — and that no hope remains for for ‘some optimism that the He said that the original reason the cosmic dust it was to collect project would be built although for the programs’ beginning was The dust — the only type of its thedepartment might insist it be to implement student input in the kind ever collected — might have moved to another site curriculum And the teachers provided clues to how the sun and planets were formed The Canadian - US venture began Jan 29 when the funnel and dustbin were launched lost with cosmic dust' ’ Will Be Sold battery-operate- R-Ut- ah behind a RESTAURANT If - — you need c sure cure r for the “munchies” try S Main s 1 1 :00 am of South America and South Africa and back to Australia where the dustbin was to have been parachuted to earth The balloon returned over Australia did not release the dustbin because it was throught the balloon should g around a second time explained Romeo Wlochowicz an astrophysics engineer at the Research Wlochowicz who built the dustbin said the balloon returned after only 13 days The to journey was expected take twice that long The balloon was becalmed on its second journey and didn t return over Australia until June 20000-mil- S' A JT52-838- 4 Hrs Open Wed - Sun from near Council Gias Delicatessen 119 balloon The balloon was to have been blown by prevailing winds eastward over the southern tips Intimate dining atmosphere and fine Italian Food Delicatessen ot Brisbane Australia for — 65-fo- Vs The Diamond Mart 2540 So State Grand Opening October 6th e But it did not respond to ground control signals to sever the 500-fotow cable between the balloon and the funnel 18 ot d |