Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 7, 1976 Governors urge welfare overhaul HERSH1EY, Pa. ()') - A di- vided Naional Governors Con- ference voted yesterday to press for an overhaul fthe welfare programs with a na- tional minimum payment level financed by the federal govern- ment. Bat first the g>vernors added a ftotnote declaring that they don't advocate a guaran- teed annual income. Then they adjourned their 68th annoal conference and helicoptered to Philadelphia to have tea with Queen Elizabeth II aboard the royal yacht Bri- tannia. IDAHO GOV. Cecil Andrus, a Democrat, was elected chair- man to succeed Robert Ray of Iowa, who said he would have made a farewell speech, but "the queen is waiting." The welfare resolution was the most controversial item on the governors agenda, and by the time they got to it, they were in a hurry. Welfare had been debated at length on Mon- clay, anyhow. The policy state- ment was approved 24 to 51. The governors heeded conser- sctive misgivings at the possi- bility they might appear to be pushing a guaranteed income, and agreed unanimously. THEY WOUND UP with a statement seeking "a national minimum payment level" with variations to cover cost of liv- ing differentials in different re- gions. They said, "there should be full federal financing at a federally - mandate minimum benefit level," and added that Washington should pay 75 per cent of the added cost for states that want their welfare bene- fits to be higher. Their policy statement also would require recipients 17 to 60 years who are able to work, to register for, and accept, jobs. - The governors did not set a minimum income figure, nor did they estimate the cost of their proposal. "We're estab- lishing a set of principles," said Cov. Dan Evans of Washington, who headed the committee that drafted the plan. GOV. ARCH MOORE of West Virginia opposed the resolution. "I could never support shifting the welfare burden to the feder- al government in its entirety," he said. The governors didn't go quite that far and, indeed, rejected a proposal by Gov. James Rhodes of Ohio that they seek an out- right federal takeover of the entire cost. Jimmy Carter, the former Georgia governor who is virtu- ally certain to be the Demo- cratic presidential nominee, met with Democratic governors and told them he, too, favors a nationwide welfare standard with federal financing up to that level. CARTER HAD breakfast with about 30 Democrats who en- dorsed his presidential candid- acy without dissent. On other policy issues, the Governors Conference: -Endorsed deregulation of natural gas prices, the move to be coupled with an excess pro- fits tax which would include in- centives for new gas explora- tion. They also said the govern- ment should set priorities to FOlt, TEN IrEN TS ircill CID ULD SAVE D'S LI;Eo promote conservation of natur- al gas. The vote on that was 34-'. -Urged ratification of a con- stitutional amendment to guar- antee equal rights for women. -Debated and then dropped a resolution for creation of a new federal department of tour- ism. Gov. Christopher Bond of Missouri, a Republican, noted that Democrat Carter is push- ing for consolidation of federal agencies, not new ones. Bond said many governors seek the same end in their states so the governors finally decided to ad- vocate consolidation of tourist programs in one existing agen- cy. LIKE ALL THEIR resolutions, that is purely advisory, binding no one. The governors set their next summer meeting for Sept. 12- 13, 1977 in Detroit. Then they went to Philadel- phia to see the Queen at what Gov. Milton Shapp of Pennsyl- vania called "a tea that she is throwing in our honor." Ships ahoy! New York's party made a splash! fcontinue from Pake 4) roots to join the band in cppm- priate anthems for each pasoig ship's homeland. And as Rumanian, Polish, Spanish, Russian, Japsiee and Columbian vessels chugged the Hudson, a potpourri of deafen- ing battle hymns and sea chan- ties bellowed from inescapable loud speakers. The street party, stretching from river to murky rive, was not without its own singing and dancing as a ban on traffic fa- cilitated impromptu burs-s of silliness in the shadow of such hallowed institutions as the Stock Exchange and I- ederal Hall. Wall Street, usually populated by pin-striped, brief case tuting stock brokers, was inundated by flocks of child tugging sight- seers, gorging themselves wsth greasy shish-kebob, gooey Ar- menian pastries and chunks of drippy, down-home watermelon. AND WHEN THE ANGRY summer clouds rolled in late in the afternoon, a mad dash ensued to the subway, where tourists and established New Yorkers piled onto the Broadway local in numbers which could put rush hour to shame. Some were destined to return that evening for a spectacular display of fireworks which crowned the sky above the Sta- te of Liberty. One feather-headdressed fel- low, however, had another rea- son for returning to the Big Apple. "Rocky said it was for sale," he said, recalling Peter Minu- et's now famous $24 purchase of Manhattan island, "so I came to btuy ifback." It has been estimated that if motor vehicle travel continues to increase at its present rate, by 1990 vehicles will be cover- ing some two trillion miles an- nually. . A phone call. A simple, that the drunk drivers responsible - - ....... . . - -_-_ - ". ten-cent phone call for a cab could for killing young people are most DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y* save your friend's life. often other young people. I BOX 2345 1 If your friend has been Take a minute. Spend a I ROCKVRLIE, MARYLAND 20852 drinking too much, he shouldn't dime. Call a cab.-That's all. If you I want to save a friend's life. be driving. can't do that, drive him yourself. Tell me what else I can do. The automobile crash is the. Or let him sleep on your couch. - My name is_ number one cause of death of people We're not asking you to be AdI your age. And the ironic thing is a doctor or a cop. Just a friend. City Rtaae - ip..T .. IF YOU LETA FRIEND DRIVE DRUNKYOU'RE NO FRIEND. wawumanaMrr w. maarn.m esoNM ,aM5ru, Ai5DP1NO