The BG News May 28, 1976

The BG News May 28, 1976

Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 5-28-1976 The BG News May 28, 1976 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News May 28, 1976" (1976). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3253. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3253 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. WASHINGTON (AP)-Effoc« to The Brooking] Institution, founded functioning 50 yean later in 1973. and it was not simply their preference stop the explosive growth of more in 1927, describes itself as a Only 27 had disappeared, while 246 that gave rise to them," he added. government agencies probably will be nonpartisan economic and political new ones were created, for a 1973 Kaufman warned that "explosive doomed to failure no matter who is research organization. total of 394, he add. growth" of government agencies and elected president, according to a study He did not include the Defense units is "evidently approaching published yesterday by the Bro xings THE 'STUDY, by Bi on kings Department, defense agencies or the rapidly-if in fact they have not Institution. economist Herbert Kaufman, said US Postal Service in the study, in already arrived." Growth of new The study also questioned whether more executive branch agencies and order to keep it manageable! he said. He said agencies die reluctantly, any good would result from efforts to units (53) were created during the once created, since they usually streamline the federal bureaucracy, a fust term of President Richard M. KAUFMAN SAID that in many develop a protective bureaucracy and agencies expands step such hopefuls as President Ford, Nixon than in any other presidential cases the names of agencies were clientele, and often enjoy Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter have term in the nation's history changed, but not the agencies congressional protection. proposed. Another 23 were created in 1973, themselves. "Attempting to cram the the first year of the second Nixon He said in an interview that a major Another factor that keeps agencies on federal level complexity and diversity of political term. The numbers include agencies conclusion of his study is that the alive and prevents a return of their institutions into a preconceived and and units created by presidential creation of agencies "is not necessarily functions to the private sector, he said, rather arbitrary pattern of symmetry order, by congressional legislation, by linked to the partisan affiliation of an is that "the public originally turned and simplicity and neatness, it could departmental orders and by incumbent president or either, from the marketplace to government be argued, would do more violence to government reorganization plans. apparently, to his ideology.'' rot certain services precisely because the system and generate more disorder Kaufman analyzed 175 agencies "Ii seems that some presidents are the market failed to provide them at than allowing it to establish its own that existed in 1923, and found that borne along by a tide of events that an acceptable price when they were untidy format." the study said. 148 of them (85 per cent) were still generated a host of new organizations. wanted." An Bowling Green. Ohio Independent Friday. May 28,1976 Student Volume 59/Number 122 Voice THe BG news Church won't quit despite Udall's plea By The Associated Press Sen. Frank Church solidly rejected yesterday a request by the Democratic presidential candidate with the second largest delegate following to quit campaigning in Ohio. Instead, he spoke to a convention of the Ohio AFL-CIO hete and was followed by former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, who holds the lead among Democrats with 880 of 1,505 delegates needed to be the Democratic nominee. Rep. Morris K. Udall (D-Ariz.) suggested in Sioux Falls. SD. on Wednesday that Church stay out of Ohio before the June 8 primary to give Udall, with 298.5 delegates committed, a better chance of defeating Carter. Yesterday, Udall said in South Dakota that he was committed to an all-out campaign. "Obviously, a two-man race is easier for me than a three-man race." he said. Church (D-ldaho) has 49 committed delegates with 107 more possible in Ohio. Udall could gain 146 more delegates in Ohio. A total of 152 delegates are being selected, but some candidates are not running in some congressional districts. THERE ARE seven candidates and a handful of favorite sons seeking various numbers of delegates in Ate primary, which will be a winner-take-all in the 23 congressional districts and proportionally divided among the 38 delegates at stake in the at-large race. However, Carter, Church and Udall are the only active campaigners. "I'm not part ot a stopCarter movement, but a support-Church movement," said Church, who planned to reevaluate his chances after Tuesday's primaries. "In light of my three primary victories, we hope to stretch it to five with Montana and Rhode Island, then well assess the situation and see what we can do. "Winning is the name of the game. As we move along we have to make an assessment of the situation^ and do everything we can." Meanwhile, Udall returned to Ohio to campaign in northeastern Ohio where he has concentrated most of his effort. He has delegate slates entered in every congressional district except one, which is in Cleveland. On Friday he will speak to the Cleveland City Club. Tony C. Embree and David E. Solganik soak up some students and fellow Anderson dwellers take turns FIRST LADY Betty Ford was expected last night for an airport reception at Boxers rays and burn up calories as they practice their sparring on warm spring days. (Newsphoto by Larry Akron to campaign for her husband. She planned to spend today traveling boxing techniques outside Anderson Hal. The Lambert) around Ohio, visiting Dayton and Find]ay. Church received a favorable response from the delegates, representing a million union members at the convention, who gave him a standing ovation when he completed his speech, attacking multinational corporations based in the United States. US-Soviets to sign nuclear pact "Some companies have become multinational not only in fact, but in thinking as well," he said. "It is time lor a president to realize that there is WASHINGTON (AP)--President for Senate ratification of a parallel UNTIL NOW, the Russians have THE TREATY actually was nothing in the preamble of the Constitution to suggest that the government was Ford and Soviet leader Leonid I. treaty restricting weapons tests. been steadfast in barring any completed early last month. White established for the maximum profit of General Motors." Brezhnev will sign an unprecedented inspection on Soviet soil. Under the House and State Dept. officials said Carter, who received a polite reception, proposed that the stop-Carter agreement today to permit American Neither power will be permitted to agreement to be signed here by Ford that "technical reasons" caused the movement was a desire on the part of the promoters to "preserve the status quo inspection of some Russian nuclear conduct underground nucleat and in Moscow by Brezhnev, the delay in the signing and denied that and the politics as usual." testing sites. explosions exceeding 150 kilotons~the observers will be allowed to check political considerations played any "Our opponents are the Republicans," Carter said. "Ronald Reagan and The twin ceremonies here and in equivalent of 150.000 tons of TNT. only on tests designed for peaceful part. Gerald Ford are just tweedle dee and tweedle dum. There's no difference Moscow dose out 18 months of Also, for the first time. American and purposes. Privately, administration sources between them. I'm just an average American, like you." complex negotiations to limit peaceful Russian observers will be on hand to Still, the accord, projected '.wo said the signing was delayed after underground testing and dear the way check for violations. years ago at the Moscow summit, is of Ford's advisers told him it would be HE SAID his critics want to maintain "at all costs their entrenched, major significance since it both politically damaging to sign a treaty unresponsive, bankrupt and irresponsible political power." establishes the precedent of foreign with the Russians just before the Carter planned to meet with members of an uncommitted statewide slate of Utility rates may drop inspection and comes at a time of Michigan primary. delegates in Cleveland last night. strain in US-Soviet relations. In competing for the GOP "As an uncommitted slate we remain open to hear from any of the potential By Tom Schrock Negotiations are lagging in Geneva presidential nomination, Ronald presidential candidates or their representatives," said Treasurer of State Gertrude Staff Writer on an agreement to impose ceilings on Reagan has attacked Ford's policy Donahey before the meeting. Donahey is the favorite daughter the 38 delegates the two superpowers' nuclear weapons toward the Soviet Union. Earlier are pledged to. Ohioans could save at least $200 million in utility bills if a proposed arsenals and the two sides have agreements with the Russians banned "While we shall continue to honor similar requests from potential candidates, constitutional amendment changing the base on which utilities set customer exchanged sharp rhetoric over Africa tests in the atmosphere and on or both announced and unannounced, such meetings should not be interpreted as a rates gains the necessary support, according to Henry W.

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