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2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, March4, 1975 Arms limitation possible , WASHINGTON, D.C. - Con¬ gress could set guidelines for overseas sales ot military equip¬ ment and services and evaluate Individual sales proposed by the Administration well ln advance under a bill Introduced recently. Currently, Congress has no role ln advance planning of U.S. arms sales, which have escalated rapidly from J.3.8 billion ln fiscal 1973 to $82 billion last year - nine times greater than ln 1970. In fact, until Congress adopted another measure last December, which were controlled wholly by the Administration, chiefly through the State Department tratlon to submit to Congress for review and possible veto any in- $25 million or more. The new bill "builds on this Initial legislation.* Senator Cay- lord NelsonfD-Wise.) said. "Con¬ gress needs the opportunity lo look at the foreign military sales program In more than Just an ad hoc. piecemeal fashion It should exercise far greater control over weapons sales because of "vast foreign policy Implications that Congress nai had no voice In.". He pointed out that $6.5 billion of the $8.2 billion in 1974 sales went to countries located In the volatile Middle East. Approxi¬ mately $4 billion in arms were sold to Iran alone, while Saudi Arabia purchased close to $600 "No one can say what Impact thts n continuing Infusion o have In this area of the world,' Nelson said. "But one thing I: certain. Congress should have th< opportunity to consider In ad- will i legislation, the President y a report forecasting mill- Congress then would n and set dollar ceilings fi country, although the Pr The President s and ltmlta- cles and negotiations, US. de¬ tary assistance compared to the fense production capability, U.S. $8.2 billion In sales. "Congress has the opportunity to thoroughly Reserve Stocks. The bill also consider in advance the proposed requires a five-year projection. foreign n litary assistance pro¬ gram," Nelson pointed out. "And amount of money Involved in the yet no such chance is afforded foreign military sales program Congress ln the case of military now far exceeds all forms of sales, even though the sales rep¬ U.S military assistance com¬ resent a much more significant lalances and bined, ln fiscal 1974, the U.S. part of our total military aid LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Clutter Philippines them off many s events were staged by Marcos proclaiming martial law. As was Philippines Is analyzed" i of bringing out the t\Z the plight ol the nonders for the Filipinos which is On Ihe surface, there is peace md tranquility among the people if Ihe Philippines, but If one were o dig deep Into society, one can rary Supposedly there Is little ir no crime and black marketing s a thing or the past. In truth. <nilted Garments Custom fitted, highest eaters, pantsuits, elc, (or people of all ages able). Call 224-7046. r- PAN AM CHARTERS ™i FLIGHT ARE STILL AVAILABLE ■ Leave San Francisco to London g JUNE 18 69 days JUNE 27 43 days ► No club to join or membershi » Government approved » All funds protected in bank es > All flights flown by Pan Am We have other charters available to Paris, Amsterdam & Madrid. Call for details. jiV^ffiT -*■ DAUGHERTY } e^aTn^r^Liam TRAVEL SERVICE,INC I 668 E. SHIELDS AVE. ♦-■--W2S9** n virtually thrown hear the announcer say, 'And now here are the words of His Excellency president Ferdinand Marcos." Marcos considers him¬ self dictator of the Philippines. If one were to analyze the mili¬ tary status of the Philippines, even our radicals would gasp ln disbelief. The only major force of the Philippines is the army and the constabulary which are sup¬ plied by American government. The Air Force and Navy are practically nonexistent. Both are comprised of weapons used by the Americans tn boththeKorean minesweepers, tankers, supply ships and F-86 Shooting Stars. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1) THE DAILY COLLEGIAN SifiMftei— meet someone especially for you. Call Match Makers 222-5416 Hours tO AM to 6 PM. Tuesday, Maroh 4, 1976 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN-3 Thinclads lose to Stanford Cardinals McGough qualifies for NCAA finals By Rick Elklns Collegian Sports Writer strengthman Mike Glroux's ouhle firsts'"'were not enough »r {he -Bulldog trackmen as the Dogs dropped a dual meet to u;iford University Saturday 91- i.iroux took the hammer throw ■ith a toss of 174-6 and then put u shot out 55-5 1/4 feet for is two firsts. nut Fresno's strength in the eld events (the 'Dogs won seven t«nt« for the day, six of them ring field events) was not enough .vercome the faster Cardinals :he running events. inly sophomore Steve Camp- ell could capture a first In a mining event as he nearly edged ,,-,ford's Alan Sheats ln the 440. ,,, pbeil clocked a 47.8 in (he i.irter mile while Sheats was I, clocking 47.9. the f DRIch- s besidesGlrouxwt 0 11 In the Javelin, Charles : ion who tossed the discus Z for a first, pat Aldrlch ,i lfi-o vault In the pole vault, Wrhardson with a 6-10 In the high Jump, and Ron ic took a first ln the triple with a hop, skip and a of 47-0 3/4. mford was especially strong- ie distance events, as they 3,000-meter steeplechase, the mtle, 880, and the three-mUe. They also took one-two In the M0- , Fresno also lost the 440 and mile relays. Stanford edged the BuUdogs In the 440 relay, run¬ ning 'a fast 40.8 to Fresno's 42.4. In the mtle, the Cardinal* timed 3:15 to Fresno's 3:22.7. Bulldog Chuck Lowe came close in both the 120 high hurdles and the 440 Intermediate hurdles, but both events. He timed'14.9 ln the 120 and 53.8 In the 440. Hts time in the 440 Intermediates was a lifetime best. Stanford's Dave Baghsaw won the 120 with a time of 14.7 and defending Pactflc-8 champion Malt Hogsett won the intermediates inatlmeof53-flat. Also taking seconds for the 'Dogs were Walt Sorenson ln the hammer (173-5). Ken Watklns In the shot put with a lifetime best of 50 3/4 and thediscus(148-U), and Darrell. Smith In the 100 with a time of 9.9. Bulldogs Randy Kc-arns and Harold Hammock also took sec¬ onds. Kearnes pole vaulted 15-0 and Hammock high jumped 6-2 The thinclads will have their first of five home meets this Saturday when they wUl host Cal State Sacramento, at Ratcllffe. Stadium. The meet ts scheduled Mike McGough, Fresno's pre¬ mier wrestler, and two-time pacific.Coast Athletic Associa¬ tion , champion, quaUfed for the NCAA Championships last week¬ end In Logan, Utah. McGough's first In the Western Regional'* 150-pound weight class boosted the senior's rec- Leadlng Portland State's Steve Danlals 3-0, McGough was award¬ ed the win when a .frustrated Danlals was tagged with disquali¬ fication due to unnecessary roughness.' Three weeks ago McGough de¬ clsloned Danlals In the CSUF .gym 9-7. Both wrestlers were "top-seeded In the-Regtonal tour¬ ney. McGough was seeded No. 1 and Danlals was No. 2. Hardfought victories garnered the well-earned victory for the 5-root-11 senior from Fresno. In gaining Ihe rinals, McGough scored a 7-3 decision over Drake University's Jim Berry. His sec¬ ond match was even closer, as he edged Cal State Fullerton's Ben Goodwin 4-2. Bulldog wrestling mentor Fred Rodrlquez said, "You could see- determination In Mike* matches > win." Rodrlquez noted that McGough must gain approval from the CSUF Athletic Commission be¬ fore he can travel to the national championships held at Princeton University In New Jersey. Fresno's other outstanding grapplers who qualified for the Regionals. Tom lson and Dan FRESNO'S MIKE McGOUGH (on right) Burtschl, were both defeated In the consolations. Burtschl, the Bulldogs' 177- pounder, lost to Portland State's Burl Bledsoe 12-6. lson, a 190- pounder, was pinned hy another Portland Stater, Bill Scott, at 5:04 In the match. BULLDOG NETMEN TRA.V.FX TO CAL POLY The CSUF tennis team plays their second game of the season today, traveling to Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. Last Saturday the netmen dropped their first game oi the 1975 season to visiting Chlco State, 6-3. KATE' SCHOOL, ClOVIS Married couple with no children to be surrogate parents to emotionally dis¬ turbed children. On the,Job training, transportation with children, house plus ex¬ penses all furnished. Salary plus benefits. Opportunity for couple interested in this field to continue college ed¬ ucation. Call (209) 299-0241 Monday through Friday.. S CUFAUDE - Fresno's hard-r%ing outfielder connects v SC fastball for a double that put the Eulldogs ahead for good (5-3) he game. CSUF defeated the last year's NCAA champs 10-6. To- it at 5:30 p.m. the diamondmen host Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo a two-night doubleheader. Cal Poly should have strong pitching hey recently shut out USC 1-0, and beat them in the second game . Hurler* Brad Kelley (0-0) and Gary Starling (3-1) are sched- i to start for Fresno. Bulldogs are 7-7 so far this year. According to Coach Bob rctt, "If we keep playing ball like we have been we're going to ill right this year." bt:; "YvM -k jT" f ******* *£& \A y BORED? GET INTO ACTION. The PEACE CORPS and VISTA are parts of ACTION. Check it out if you're graduating this year. PEACE CORPS/VISTA ON CAMPUS THROUGH FRIDAY, MAR. 7 - 9 am - 3 pm BY POPULAR W DEMAND T WE REPEAT THIS OFFER ^H5S^ 1,000 CSUF COEDS <■" to receive absolutely free 8 pr. oi beautiful imported earrings NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. JUST COME IN. GET THEM FREE WITH THIS AD. -STORE HOURS - EAST SHAW 1 Suri. 18 n. fasmlashiOIlfeir l^"—
Object Description
Title | 1975_03 The Daily Collegian March 1975 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | March 4, 1975 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, March4, 1975
Arms limitation possible ,
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Con¬
gress could set guidelines for
overseas sales ot military equip¬
ment and services and evaluate
Individual sales proposed by the
Administration well ln advance
under a bill Introduced recently.
Currently, Congress has no
role ln advance planning of U.S.
arms sales, which have escalated
rapidly from J.3.8 billion ln fiscal
1973 to $82 billion last year -
nine times greater than ln 1970.
In fact, until Congress adopted
another measure last December,
which were controlled wholly by
the Administration, chiefly
through the State Department
tratlon to submit to Congress for
review and possible veto any in-
$25 million or more.
The new bill "builds on this
Initial legislation.* Senator Cay-
lord NelsonfD-Wise.) said. "Con¬
gress needs the opportunity lo
look at the foreign military sales
program In more than Just an ad
hoc. piecemeal fashion It should
exercise far greater control over
weapons sales because of "vast
foreign policy Implications that
Congress nai had no voice In.".
He pointed out that $6.5 billion
of the $8.2 billion in 1974 sales
went to countries located In the
volatile Middle East. Approxi¬
mately $4 billion in arms were
sold to Iran alone, while Saudi
Arabia purchased close to $600
"No one can say
what Impact thts n
continuing Infusion o
have In this area of the world,'
Nelson said. "But one thing I:
certain. Congress should have th<
opportunity to consider In ad-
will
i legislation, the President
y a report forecasting mill-
Congress then would n
and set dollar ceilings fi
country, although the Pr
The President
s and ltmlta-
cles and negotiations, US. de¬
tary assistance compared to the
fense production capability, U.S.
$8.2 billion In sales. "Congress
has the opportunity to thoroughly
Reserve Stocks. The bill also
consider in advance the proposed
requires a five-year projection.
foreign n litary assistance pro¬
gram," Nelson pointed out. "And
amount of money Involved in the
yet no such chance is afforded
foreign military sales program
Congress ln the case of military
now far exceeds all forms of
sales, even though the sales rep¬
U.S military assistance com¬
resent a much more significant
lalances and
bined, ln fiscal 1974, the U.S.
part of our total military aid
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Clutter
Philippines
them off many s
events were staged by Marcos
proclaiming martial law. As was
Philippines Is analyzed"
i of bringing out the
t\Z the plight ol the
nonders for the Filipinos which is
On Ihe surface, there is peace
md tranquility among the people
if Ihe Philippines, but If one were
o dig deep Into society, one can
rary Supposedly there Is little
ir no crime and black marketing
s a thing or the past. In truth.
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