Page len litMCHI~iAN DAILY fuesaay, July 19 r9 Justice Department plns to weed out discrimination in federal laws WASINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department launched a two-year effort yesterday to weed out sex discrimination from the rhicket of thousands of federal laws and regula- tions. A task force will use compu- ters to screen 4,0(X1 federal WEDNESDAY for Billiards and Bowling 11 A.M. to 6 P.M. at The Union laws for certain code words, such as man, woman, male, fe- male and other language denot- ing gender. THEN IT MUST determine whether the sex differentiation amounts to unfair treatment for either men or women. In some cases it may decide the distinc- tion is legitimate. In other cases, it will ask Congress to change the law so it will apply equally to men and women. The project may have a strong impact on military regulations, Social Security and public as- sistance program, said .Ms. Stewart Oneglia, a Maryland lawyer who began work yester- day as director of the sex dis- crimination task force in the department's civil rights divi- sion. "This is a' massive project to review all of the federal code and regulations and remove all the unequal treatment of the sexes," Oneglia told a news conference. "IT COULD end up benefiting men a lot, but I don't think it's going to take anything away from women. We would end up extending certain benefits to men," she added. Some changes may be as sim- ple as substituting the word per- son for man or woman but oth- ers will require more compli- cated policy decisions, Oneglia said. The same process will be ap- plied to the thousands upon thousands of federal regulations. Task force' recommendations for regulatory changes will be sent to the affected agency. Oneglia cited these examples of rules that will come under scrutiny: * The law banning wom- en from combat duty assign- ments in the military,. *Rules extending military post exchange privileges to widows of servicemen but not to widowers of servicewomen. * A Social Security rule which applies when a handicap- ped man and woman marry each other. The rule cuts off disabili- ty benefits for the wife if her husband loses disability pay- ments because he gets a job. * Rules which make it tough- er for fathers than for mothers to qualify for aid to families with dependent children. Oneglia and Asst. Atty. Gen. Drew Days, head of the civil rights division, noted that for- mer President Ford first told the department to undertake the project a year ago. But the department had little money then for the effortsod relied on a handful of workers borrowed from other agencies Very little was accomplished CONGRESS since had appra. priated $620,000 to pay the full- time staff of 15 through the next fiscal year. "It was made apparent to as that Congress wanted this done as quickly as possible," days said. "We would hope to have it substantially completed in tw'o years." Detroit officer, key By the time we're old enough to have children, we've been thoroughly sold on the idea. By our parents, our grandparents, our friends and neighbors, the media, everyone. It's hard to remember we ever had a choice in the first place. But there is a choice. Having a child is a tremendous responsibility and an important decision. Probably the most important decision we'll ever make. And once it's made, it can never be undone. Just remember... you do have a choice. So think about it, and do what's right for you. For more information write: ------ -- -- -- -- National Organization for Non-Parents 806 Reisterstown Road Baltimore, Maryland 21208 Id like to know more about N-O. Please send me your free "Am i Parent Materia" packagea- address cIty~stale ip .wwMMoogo witness ambushed TlAYLORl, iticli0,";; A Detroit police ofticc escorting a"itess in an "rgasicd c-"i case was ambushed re trrday il what must hare bes a set up, the Wayne tw'vnt r'-ed crime task force said 'There had to he a vl; c-se- where because on i trw ps pie knew about tic s,, travel plans,' saul Isi p i-",r Robert Ityalt o th task frce THE WITNESS escapI sry durins a gunbatei ic- least 25 shots iserr facd 11:a: said Detroit atroas TI a Pennbacker, 32, ,,iaulc a lice reteran assigurd t thr lis force for the past thr- ar , suffered multipe b ack ic when his car [was mcc t hr rad and hit a po Pennybacke h nine-shot pisto i th' ot gunfire, said tc-Ic-i£° d i hit one of the ties ar thv -' pants of the assailant' TASK FORCE OFFICE7s _J Pennybacker was set i Metropolitan Airport ii sarbiv ban Romulus early yes rat i escort a key witness in c-p coming trial. The officers refused t ideti- fy the witness The witness came trai the south, east or west and all we can say about it" Hyatt said. "To say anything further about the witness would make it easier for the assailants to knout the witness' travel plans and to try again. We are not even sat- ing what case the witness was connected with." However, he added that the witness had made several trips in and out of Detroit previousl without incident. Hyatt declined comment an reports the witness was a key figure against brothers Antonio and Antonino Ruggirello of De' troit, free on $100,000 bond each while awaiting trial on charge of conspiracy to murder aud attempted murder. The islandfs of St. Pierre and Miquelon, off the coast of NeW foundland, are part oft French Overseas Territory. They are a valuable base & fishermen from Breton and NHr mandy.