Page 2-Friday, June 9, 1978-The Michigan Daily Brown asks Cal. to aid schools SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. asked California lawmakers yesterday to give $4 billion in direct aid and $1 billion in loans to schools, cities and counties hit by the Jarvis property tax cut measure. He also told an emergency joint session of the legislature that he would propose cuts of at least $300 million in the state's $17.4 billion budget in response to the tax cuts mandated in Proposition 13. Californians approved the amendment to the state constitution in a landslide vote Tuesday. BROWN, WHO vigorously opposed the measure before the vote, repeated his promise that there must be no state tax increases to offset the tax cuts. "Voters have told us they want a tax cut. They don't want a game," said Brown, who was somber during the brief address. The proposal, named after tax critic Howard Jarvis, takes effect July 1 and requires a 57 per cent cut in all property taxes. It also rolls back assessments to 1975-76 levels and limits assessment in- creases to two per cent a year except when a property changes hands. THE AID Brown proposed would reduce the amounts that local gover- ting government spending. "If he comes around to our way of thinking, he will get our support," Priolo said. Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, a Brown ally and the most powerful Democrat in the legislature, said he doubted that the state could come up with as much money as Brown proposed. McCarthy said a bi-partisan committee would be named to draft amendments to a tax bill which is now in its final stages in the legislature. BROWN SAID the $4 billion in grants could be made for one year only, using up a $4 billion state budget surplus that has accumulated over the past four years. McCarthy said his figures of the surplus are about $1 billion lower than Brown's. Brown described the loan funds as similar to a revolving fund to meet cash flow problems. He said in future years, the state could afford to give no more than an estimated $2 billion annually, plus $1 billion in loans. This would force schools, cities and counties to reduce their budgets in future years by $5 billion, the equivalent of a 15 per cent cut, he said. BROWN, WHO said he would make detailed proposals later, did not specify how he would cut the state budget. He repeated his earlier order of an im- mediate hiring freeze for all state agencies to reduce the state's work for- ce by attrition. Brown also said the federal gover- nment "should assist, not by reaping a windfall, but by providing assistance to those who face troubled times." That was a reference to the estimated $2 billion in extra federal income taxes Californians will pay because of reduced property tax deductions. HE DID NOT specify exactly how that money could be returned by the federal government to California. Brown also said businesses will save $3 billion in taxes under Proposition 13 and he urged corporate presidents to "invest that money in California, to create jobs" to offset the layoffs of workers anticipated in local schools and city halls. Brown's address came as schools, cities and counties started sending layoff notices to thousands of em- ployees, and while suits attempting to block the tax cuts and layoffs were awaiting a decision from the California Supreme Court. (v. Brown nments must cut from their budgets under the measure from $7 billion to around $3 billion. State Assembly GOP leader Paul Priolo praised Brown, a Democrat, for adopting Republican views about cut- Turkish arms embargo lift seems unlikely WASHINGTON (AP) - Greek Cypriot President Spyrous Kyprianou campaigned yesterday for retaining the U.S. arms embargo against Turkey, even as President Carter lined up in- fluential senators in favor of lifting it. Kyprianou, meeting with Congress members and reporters, said that if the embargo is lifted, "a Cyprus solution would be more difficult." CARTER, meanwhile, met- with a group of senators to argue the opposite, saying that the three-year-old embargo has not helped solve the Cyprus problem and has weakened NATO. Afterwards, Sen. John Stennis, (D- Miss.), announced his firm support for removing the embargo, which he has favored doing since 1975, and announ- ced that the Senate Armed Services Committee, which he chairs, will soon hold hearings on the subject. STENNIS SAID, "We must close ranks in NATO to meet the challenge of a Soviet buildup and at the same time help look for a solution to the problem of Cyprus with fairness to both Turkey and Greece." Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), said the issue would be hotly debated in the Peer Counselors at University Conselig Services are offering: ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING WORSHOP with focus on interviews Learn how to present yourself assertively in an interview setting. June 13-2pm-5pm TR AT1NE 1M I i t ) Senate, but he rated prospects for repeal of the embargo as "generally good." "I think the case the President makes is a very strong one," he said. DECLARING THAT the embargo "obviously hasn't worked" to promote a Cyprus settlement between Greece and Turkey, Church said, "I don't think' we should perpetuate a policy that has failed." Church, w~io supported the embargo in 1975, changed his position and voted to lift it earlier this year. However, despite pledges of support from senators at the White House meeting, there was no sign of a dramatic shift in sentiment on Capitol Hill where the outcome is considered in doubt. REP. CLARENCE Long, (D-Md.), chairman of the House appropriations subcommittee on foreign aid, said the proposal to lift the embargo was "another example of the inverted, Or- wellian reasoning of the ad- ministration, just like the arguments advanced for weapons in the Middle East - weapons for peace. I hear what you're saying, but I can't get the logic." Long's remarks came during testimony by George Vest, assistant secretary of state for Europe, who said the administration position was that the embargo had served its usefulness as an "object lesson" to the Turks but that it now was an impediment to a Cyprus settlement. Carter, flanked by Secretary of State THE MICHIGAN DAILY volme LxXXVIII, No. s-s Friday, June 9, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters): $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Surhmer session published Tuesday throughSatur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 inAnn Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Cyrus Vance and Defense Secretary Harold Brown, told the group he does not question the justification for im- posing the embargo three years ago, af- ter Turkey employed American- supplied arms on Cyprus. BUT HE argued that instead of helping to promote a Cyprus set- tlement, the embargo contributed to a worsening of relations between NATO's eastern partners, Greece and Turkey, and between those countries and NATO. Continuing the embargo, Carter con- tended, would lead to "a perpetuation of the present stalemate regarding Cyprus, if not a deterioration." Kyprianou said the reason the em- bargo hasn't worked is that both the Ford and Carter administrations have favored its repeal, giving Turkey hope. "They have to know the embargo will remain," he said. Hey Baby... going my way? find out! Advertise in the Daily Classifieds under Transportation. Call 764-0557 . You don't have to be a bully to have what you need in life 8 SESSION INTRODUCTORY GROUPS Group meeting once weekly begins week of June 12 Group meeting twice weekly begins week of June 26 *Times to be arranged To apply for Workshop or Groups, call or come to University Counseling Services/3100 Michigan Union/764-8312