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Show Washington Briefs Abe Martin Nixon Expected to Seek Continued School Aid Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) The Administration is expected to request continua- ent who has been named commissioner, wont take over in Washington until May. In this situation, Chairman D. Carl Perkins, spurred his committee into early action. He began hearings Jan. 28 and has met steadily since then, bringing in more than 50 witnesses, mcst of them school officials. Without exception they pleaded for continuation of the program. tion cf the major school aid program of former President Lyndon B. Johnson without any major changes. The program, which provides more than $1 billion to help schools devise special projects for the educationally will be the disadvantaged, first big bill acted on in the House. The House Education and Labor Committee starts writand ing the bill Tuesday House leaders hope to have it passed before the start of the Easter recess congressional April 3. The speed with which the Democratic - controlled committee has tackled the legislation is one of the reasons the new administration is prepared to go along with it. Secretary Robert H. Finch, still learning the ropes as head of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, has had no time to work up a Nixon administration program. There isnt even a resident commissioner of education on duty in his department. James E. Allen, the New York state school superintend- - 2 1 Up, Continued From Page One - g Montana, is the new chairman of the Military Construction Appropriations Subcommittee that will handle the bill containing deployment funds. Of its nine members, three oppose the Sentinel, three favor it and three are undecided. Of the 24 members on the full Senate Appropriations Committee, nine favor funds, seven oppose them and eight are undecided. While many opponents warn on the Sentinel a will jeopardize the possibility of serious arms limitation talks with the Soviet Union (DBOtb ivACD of U.S near-recor- .Some senators are being influenced by the possibility of location of a Sentinel site in their states, the poll indicated. Thus, both New Hampshire senators, Republican Norris Cotton and Democrat Thomas J. McIntyre, supported the Sentinel last year but are publicly uncommitted this year amid talk the controversial Sentinel installation proposed for the Boston area might be moved to their state. Another senator from New England, who had strongly supported Sentinel in the past, said he opposes deployment around cities and is undecided about deployment elsewhere. He asked that he not be named. Growing doubts about the Sentinel are especially apparent among newer members of the Senate. Cook, One Speaks Out . Of the said Friday, "History has shown an expensive record of costly missile systems, either begun and canceled or renders,. useless by immediate obsolescence. The poll showed that all the senators who opposed the project at one point or another last year remain opposed, or are unwilling to say how they will vote. 15 freshmen, only Sen. James B, Allen, is willing to say publicly he supports Sentinel site funds. One other said he will too but asked that his name be withheld. Seven are opposed and six undecided. The latest opponent among the freshmen, Sen. Marlow ,, ADVERTISEMENT or BRONCHITIS ASTHMA COUGHS nvurniK attacks f Hrmichial nmhe nu sufAsthma nr limm-tuttfer couching ami Uiihmli hreathinp that ruins sleep gut (jirek artinc M KNDAt'O a Inal. See how fast you eurb enutihuu: and breathe easier tlms steep ami feel better. To help loosen and remove that choking phlegm get MKNDAOO at druggist. Jf TOhhp Btamras &Q TOfe Qtxro OWst The marriages rose number last to a year bu the birthrate contindecline to a recued its ord low, the Public Health Service reported Saturday. number and create new uncertainties, Sen. Strom Thurmcd, called it "the world's greatest hope for stabilizing world tensions" in view of Soviet missile gains. Some Influenced supporters of the Sentinel is that one of its most persistent Sena'e Majority opponents, Leader Mike Mansfield of 5 AHtJftD Down WASHINGTON (AP) was the comment by Sen. John L. McClellan of ArkanDemocrat sas. on the defense appropriations subcommittee. "I favor an aggressive continued program of research, he said. "But as to deployment, I have a certain reservation based on effectiveness. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson, like McClellan a Sentinel supporter last year, said, "I have serious doubts about going ahead with the ABM. He added that unless the cost and need can be justified, he feels the system should be held up. Another ominous sign for second-rankin- Its (wire as hard t do somethin' you ought t do as it is t' do somethin you cant do. The Sail Lake Tribune, Sunday, March 9, 199 Sentinel Okay Bodes Nixon Selhaek 3 Water Levels and d TemnrntitfAio The PH3 National Center for Health Statistics said U.S. births during 1968 totaled 3 470,000, the smallest number At the same time, since the birthi ate dropped to a record 17.4 per 1,000 persons from the 1957 peak of 25.3. But the center predicted an upturn in the number of births by 1975, basing its forecast on the expected increase in the number of women of childbearing age. 19-.'- In Priced For a Sellout it said, there mic-196- were 14.3 mlllon women between the ages of 20 and 2P This number will rise to 15.5 million by 1970 and to 18.3 million by 1975, it added. The center said the 2,059,000 marriages a rate of in 1968 represented 10.3 per 1,000 per- rate since percent increase over 1967. It was related to the high number of marriages and subsequent births after sons, 1951 the highest and an 8 World War II. U.S. Russ Meet -- - SecWASHINGTON (AP) P. William State of retary Soviet Rogers met with Ambassador Anatuly F. Dobrynin Saturday in another of discussions the that are proving highly significant in the early days of the Nixon Administration. President Nixon, in his folTuesday news conference Eufrom his return lowing rope, repeatedly referred to sessions he and Rogers had had with Dobrynin. Nixon portrayed the Soviets as wanting to avoid nuclear confrontations with the United States, and therefore interested In cooling off international ranging flashpoints from the Middle East and Berlin to Vietnam. He listed the Middle East as the first item on which talks with the Soviets could take place. Discussions on curbing the missile race are a future possibility, he said. for Rogers A spokesman said the secretary talked with Dobrynin at the State Department for two hours. 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