THURSDAY, 4 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN IAILV PAGE TIBER THURSDAY, 4 MARCH 1965 'FilE IIICIIIGAN I)AILV PAGE THREE REPORTS FILED: HEW Seeks Rights Compliance Senate Kills U.S. Looks on as Red China Woos Khan i'1d2-2 ~'3 / vrtr + i tv r WASHINGTON UPI)-State and Assistant Secretary of Welfare local agencies which receive fed- James M. Quigley said "I think eral funds for health, education the overwhelming majority of our and welfare programs may soon recipients have sent in their as- get a push if they don't assure surances of compliance or are do- the government they are comply- ing so." ing with the 1964 Civil Rights Act. He reiterated that voluntary Yesterday was a target date - compliance is still the goal-rath- but not a deadline-for recipients er than pressure or precipitous of such aid under 95 federal pro- cutting off of aid for failure to grams to send in assurance of comply, as the law permits. compliance or tell of their plans Reviews Reports to eliminate racial and other dis- Quigley said his department is crimination. now beginning a review of assur- Detroit Says Welfare Cases tTo Receive. Contraceptives DETROIT 0P1)-The Detroit City Welfare Department is go- ing to make contraceptive pills and birth control devices available to its welfare clients. The policy, which supplants a prior move of a more restrictive na- ture, was adopted by the City Welfare Commission Tuesday. Under the new policy, welfare workers Will be permitted to sug- ances that have been received and '65 B udget also will immediately proceed tog determine which recipients have failed to send their reports. LANSING A -The Senate kill He said the welfare department ed Gov. George Romney's budget would prefer that a school dis- Tuesday but Democratic legisla- trict which has a problem take tive leaders told the governor theyt enough time to come in with a! will consider all its key elements good workable plan rather than and will avoid a logjam of bills at =Y m send in an assurance of compli- the end of the session. ance which does not reflect the The Senate action came on a actual conditions, string of party line votes. It fol- No Figures lowed an hour-long meeting at Quigley said he did not have a which majority leader Sen, Ray- figure on the individual school dis- mond Dzendzel (D-Detroit) and tricts which have sent in assur- House Speaker Joseph Kowalski ances or plans to end discrimina- (D-Detroit) tried to clarify with tion. But he said they number ins o Romney their differences. the thousands and include recent Senate Republicans lost out in receipts from districts in Missi 3- moves to delay the budget rejec- sippi and South Carolina. tion. Angry words were exchanged g Describing procedure to be fol- but Democrats said it was all right PRESIDENT KHAN lowed, Quigley said: with them if Republicans reintro- "After March 3, we'll immedi- duce Romney's budget pabkage. By CONRAD FINK ately be doing two things: After conferring with Romney, Associated Press Staff Writer "Fistwewil reie wht i IKowalski said that he and Rom- . First, we will review what is ney remained at odds over wheth- NEW DELHI - The United an egvauatin t ean tr ents oItl e er it is sound practice to con- States is watching helplessly this plans sider new money programs before week as an Asian leader on whom pSan , passing the budget for existing it pinned many expensive hopes Second, we will review and d- functions. is wooed by Communist China's termine where we have not got- Root of the problem is a consti- leaders on their home ground, ten anything and inquire as to the tutional provision that the gover- He is President Mohammed Ay- situation in the state or locality, nor's budget bills must be accept-" ub Khan of Pakistan, who receiv- ',ed or rejected before any monay ; ed what Peking Radio calls "a what are the plans, and can we be item not mentioned in the budget tremendously warm welcome." of help. can be considered. It is nothing new for American diplomats in Asia to see key lead-1 ers go to Peking. Indonesians. Cambodians, Burmese and Japa- nese have made the trip. Center of U.S. Plans A few years ago he was the center of U.S. plans for a firm anti-Communist alliance in Asia. Ayub had taken Pakistan into both the Southeast Asia Trea y Organization and the Central Treaty Organization alliances. The U.S. economic and military aid in Pakistan totals more than $4 billion and the flow of dollars is likely to continue despite Ayub s flirtation with the Chinese. In Pakistan, as in other Asian nations flirting with Peking, American diplomats have essen- tially two choices. They can wait, hoping to sal- vage some influence that will strengthen America's position in the Asia-wide confrontation with Communist China. Or they can quit, with the in- evitable result that China wins. Cast Lots Some of the nations along Chi- nas' perimeter will cast their lot with Peking regardless, as Cam- bodia and Indonesia apparently already have done. Asian leaders have many com- plex reasons for making the Pe- king trip. The Japanese want trade with China. Indonesians want support in their fight against Malaysia.: the world and in this region can Cambodians want backing in their be reduced and peace maintained." quarrel with South Viet Nam. Pak- Ayub, like many Asian leaders, istanis want Chinese help in their feels his country couldn't be say- struggle with India over Kashmir. Above all, some Asian leaders ed by all of America's ships and seem to have concluded that in planes in a showdown with China. the long run China will be the Ayub's visit to Peking doesn't power to reckon with in this part mean he's throwing Pakistan in- of the world. to China's orbit. He's scheduled Thanks China to visit Washington April 26 for Ayub inPeking has thanked talks with President LyndonB. China for its support in the Kash- Johnson and probably will con- mir quarrel. but said his primary tinue trying to walk Pakistan purpose is to exchange views on down the narrow path between "how the deepening tensions n China and the U.S. JEW i Sound insulated construction gest birth control to clients. The World News Roundup clients must declare in writing that they accept such aid voluntarily. Contraceptive pills and birth con- trol devices are to be made avail- able free of charge. Unwed moth- ers as well as married couples will be included. UflIV(RSITY TOWERS " Now renting for Aug. '65 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. & FOREST AVE. PHONE: 761.2680 By The Associated Press KHARTOUM - The Sudanese government charged last night that Congolese aircraft penetrated Sudan's air space, and a' spokes- man declared that "if such flights are repeated the Sudanese army will be instructed to shoot them down." K * * TEL AVIV - Egyptian MIG fighters crossed from Sinai into the air space of the Negev Desert yesterday but were driven by Is- ' rael Mirage jets, a military spokesman announced. North of the Sea of Galilee, there was another clash with Syr- ian frontier forces. The spokesman said Syrian machine gun fire wounded an Israeli tractor driver working near the Almagor Settle- ment on the west bank of the Jordan River. In Damascus, a Syrian army communique said the exchange of fire occurred when the Israeli tractor entered the demilitarized area to plow Arab land. * * * JACKSON-Twenty-one Hinds County deputy sheriffs resigned yesterday after a grand jury was ordered to investigate their alleg- ed participation in the murder of three civil rights workers last sum- mer. Only one deputy in the criminal division kept his badge. The oth- ers, including Chief Deputy How- ard Evans and the sheriff's broth- er, Jim Pickett, submitted resig- nations. * * WASHINGTON - The Atomic Energy Commission reported that the United States recorded seismic signals yesterday from an event in the Siberian area where the So- viet Union has conducted nuclear tests in the past. In response to questions, an AEC spokesman said the U.S. was neither assuming it was a nuclear test nor ruling out that possibil- ity. WASHINGTON - The Atomic Energy Commission yesterday conducted an underground nuclear test, which it said was of low in- termediate yield, at its Nevada test site. Low intermediate, in the AEC -scale, is a wide range equal to 20,000 to 200,000 tons of TNT. WASHINGTON-The Senate In- vestigations Subcommittee report- ed yesterday a "ruthless," nation- wide mob known variously as the r Mafia and La Cosa Nostra is prof- iting to the tune of "many bil- lions" of dollars a year from gam- bling, narcotics, prostitution and other rackets. In a formal report to be sub- mitted to the Senate today, the subcommittee urged Congress t consider the enactment of new laws for an all out war against the outfit. MARION-Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. led hundreds of Negroes yesterday on a three-mile march to bury Jimmie Lee Jackson, whom King had described as "a mar- tyr in the crusade for human dig- nity and freedom." Jackson, a laborer who had tak- en an active part in the civil rights campaign in adjoining Per- ry County, was shot in the stom- ach during a bloody outbreak of racial violence at Marion follow- ing an attempted night street demonstration Feb. 18. MOSCOW-Communist parties of 19 countries emphasized yester- day one thing they agreed upon. denunciation of U.S. actions in Viet Nam. But they are believe.i to have disagreed on what to say about the Red Chinese challenge to Soviet policies. RAWATPTNDIT Pnritan-Nin The prior policy required wel- fare clients to initiate birth con- trol discussions with caseworkers. Caseworkers then could refer them to clergymen or physicians. Un- wed mothers were not included. The cost of pills or devices also had to be borne by the clients un- der the former policy. The commission said it adopted the new policy in the interests of "individual, family and communi- ty happiness and security." The new policy goes against recommendations of the Michigan Catholic Conference, a spokesman for the Roman Catholic Church said. The Catholic Conference had urged that birth control services be limited to married women and that welfare coseworkers be bar- red from bringing up discussions on the subject with welfare re- cipients. Detroit's City Health Depart- ment earlier adopted a policy iden- tical with the Welfare Commis- sion's new policy. At that time the Michigan Episcopal Church sup- ported the Health Department's position. City Welfare Superintendent Daniel J. Ryan said the new policy would be put into practice within two weeks. Ryan said the policy protects caseworkers. He said workers with "personal convictions" against certain forms of birth control would not be expected to mention the subject to clients. Other case- workers would be assigned to such clients, he said. - ------- ---- t t _ ,. ".,;ate w"r r , i ,. .,.,, . I o< /s 1 95 $1 n05 loomed in the rural villages of India so that each pattern . 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