The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 14, 1978-Page 5 'U' SLA TED TO RECEIVE $137.5 MILLION State House OK's budget bills LANSING (UPI) - The state House yesterday approved 1978-79 spending plans totaling nearly $4 billion, boosting state assistance to welfare families, local schools and state universities. Included among the appropriations is a $137.5 million slice for the University's Ann Arbor campus. THE MASSIVE $1.2 billion welfare budget, sent to the Senate on a 71-30 vote, actually represents a decrease of about $46 million from the current year's spending levels thanks to large part to declining welfare caseloads. It is about $3 million over Gov. William Milliken's recommendation. The budget bills are for the fiscal year beginning this Oct. 1. Although total spending is down, aid to individual welfare clients is boosted by the bill. RECIPIENTS OF AID to Families with Dependent Children (ADC)-who take up a huge chunk of the total budget-would get about 11 per cent more under the bill. For a family of four, this means an increase to $500 per month from the current level of $449. The $2 billbion school aid bill, returned to the Senate on a 101-3 vote, hikes the level of revenue guaranteed through state aid by about $120 per pupil. THE MEASURE CONTAINS about $1 billion in regular state aid, about $500 million in special grants for programs like special education and busing and about $450 million for retirement programs. Overall, the measure calls for spending about $300 million more next year than in the current fiscal year and it is somewhat less than $100 million over Milliken's recommendation. The $631.3 million higher education bill, sent to the Senate on a 96-4 vote, is about $30 million over Milliken's recommendation and less than $90 million over current spending levels. IN ADDITION TO the University's share, the measure contains the following appropriations: Cen- tral Michigan University $27.3 million, Eastern Michigan University $32.1 million, Ferris State College $20.3 million, Grand Valley State College $12.5 million, Lake Superior State College $5.5 million, Michigan State University $137.5 million, Michigan Technology University $19.3 million. Other appropriations were: Northen Michigan University $19.6 million, Oakland University $18.5 million, Saginaw Valley State College $6.4 million, U- M, Dearborn $8.9 million, U-M, Flint $8.2 million, Wayne State University $93.2 million, Western Michigan University $43.5 million, Institute of Geron- tology $975,300. Abortion restrictions may trigger new fight WASHINGTON (AP) - The House during fiscal year 1979. HEW oversees agreed yesterday to tighten restrictions Medicaid, the program through which on Medicaid abortions, ignoring war- most government-funded abortions are nings that its stance would trigger a provided. battle with the Senate like the one that Wright's amendment would have consumed six months last year. allowed government payments for The House veted 212-198 to reject an abortions when a woman is a victim of amendment offered by Majority rape or incest that has been reported to Leader Jim Wright that would have authorities or when two physicians cer- adopted the same compromise tify that she would suffer severe and language that finally broke the long-lasting physical health damage. deadlock last year. Rep. Bob Michel (R-Ill.), said he sup- The members instead adopted ported the compromise last year, but language allowing government could not do so now because the payments for abortion only when a regulations HEW wrote were too woman's life is in danger. This position liberal. He said Congress placed "an was rejected by the Senate last year, undue amount of confidence" in HEW leading to the deadlock. to follow the lawmakers' wishes. AMAZING NEW CANCER OPERATION S 1 e e r f 0 d it e 0 n v SEN. EDWARD Brooke (R-Mass.), who led the fight to liberalize the restrictions last year, issued a statement saying he once again would oppose the House language. "There is no question that I would op- pose this inhumane and unrealistic discrimination as strongly as I did last year. And I am confident that the over- whelming majority of my colleagues in the Senate would once again join me in refusing to accept such discriminatory legislation - no matter how long or how hard the fight would be," Brooke said. THE HOUSE action came during final consideration of a $58 billion spending bill for the departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) BEFORE PASSING the bill 338-61, the House also tacked on an anti-quota amendment that would apply to affir- mative action programs for minorities and women in employment and education. It was offered by Rep. Robert Walker (R-La.), who argued that quotas, goals, timetables and other kinds of numerical targets are discriminatory and exclusionary. The House also agreed to chop $1.8 billion across-the-board from the budget total. Rep. Clarence Miller (R- Ohio), who offered the proposal said this sum, added to a $1 billion cut for reducing waste and fraud in HEW programs which was approved earlier, means the House has sliced five per cent of the bill's budget total. -Follett's Michigan Bookstore SUMMER HALF TERM TEXTS IN STOCK shop at Follett's and save TURN YOUR TEXTS INTO CA S AT FOLLETT'S south state at north u~niversi'ty The doctor doesn't cut out anything. You cut out cigarettes. This simple surgery is the surest way to save you from lung cancer. And the American Cancer Society will help you perform it. We have free clinics to help you quit smoking. So, before you smoke another cigarette, call the A.C.S. office nearest you. And don't put it off. The longer you keep smoking, the sooner it can kill yoft. AMERMCAN CAMER' RCMET