The Michigan ily Vol. LXXXV, No. 30-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, June 18, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages u rkey1 ANKAPRA, Turkey (P) - Declaring the U.S. arms embargo "both unjust and wrong in all its aspects," Turkey de- manded yesterday that the United States open negotiations on the future of its bases in Turkey. A note delivered to the U.S. Embassy ordered that negotiations begin within 30 days. It said that if "action is not taken to initiate the talks" the U.S. mili- tary installations will be subjected "to a new situation." There was no elabora- tion. THE 20 American bases are import- ant both as the southeastern buttress of the North Atlantic alliance end as moni- tors of Soviet naval movements in and out of the Black Sea. The most vital in- stallations are the Incirlik Air Base for asks review of U.S. bases nuclear bombers and three intelligence- gathering bases. Turkey has been threatening to t a k e action against the U.S. bases ever since Congress cut off American arms aid to Ankara last winter over the Turkish in- vasion of Cyprus. The Congress voted the embargo because the Turks used Amer- icans arms in the invasion last July and subsequently took no steps to withdraw. Under pressure from Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and after the Greek and Turkish Cypriots resumed ne- gotiations, the U.S. Senate voted last month to rescind the ban. But the House of Representatives has taken no action yet, and the Turkish note was seen as an attempt to pressure the House into quick action. TURKEY "has waited in vain for re- versal of the American decision, which is both unjust and wrong in all its as- pects," declared Foreign Minister Sabri Caglayangil. "It was finally imperative for Turkey to consider retaliatory action as our hop- es were upset by a growing anti-Turkish attitude." In Washington, State Department spokesman Robert Anderson said t h e Turkish note was being studied and there would be no comment "until we have a chance to review its contents in greater detail." He renewed the administrations calls on Congress to lift the arms embargo. "We should like to see this bill passed at tne earliest," he said. DEFENSE Department officials have voiced concern that the arms embargo could eventually lead to a loss of U.S. bases in Turkey. The Turkish note was delivered the morning after Turkey's authoritative Na- tional Security Council reported it had given Premier Suleyman Demirel a pack- age of "proposals containing measures to be implemented against U.S. interests in Turkey." Reliable sources said these included a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Turkey. The council declared that Turkey had been "seriously humiliated by the ac- tions of a trusted ally". City, police face heated arbitration on new contract By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI A heated arbitration period between the city and its police command officers union is now virtually inevitable following Council's Monday night nixing of the union's Teamster-engineered contract. The two year pact, which would have been retro- active to July 1, 1974, called for an 11 per cent annual average wage hike as well a written guarantee that none of the 34 police sergeants, lieutenants or captains represented by the union would be laid off. These provisions, along with the contract's $50,000 budget overrun, provoked Council Democrats to kill the Re- publican-supported contract proposal in a 5-5 vote. BINDING arbitration sessions are tentatively slated to begin the first week in July, and will last at least two or three days, according to city and police nego- tiators. The board of three arbitors-one representing the city one speaking for the union and a third neutral representative-will take an estimated 30 days to hand over their binding decision. The give-and-take arbitration session will in all like- lihood be a tumultuous one for both the city and the union. Several factors, however, appear to spell suc- cess for the command officers as they gear up for yet another round of contract talk. State Act 312, which gives police and fire fighters binding arbitartion, presents one of the highest hurdles for the city. In a strongly worded memo to Council members last week, City Administrator Sylvester Murray claimed that the state law binds cities to con- tracts which he says ultimately favor the unions. BLASTING the contract proposal offered to the city, Murray said: "Act 312 means there was not free col- lective bargaining between the - city and the unions. The Teamsters knew that historically unions get a better deal from 312 arbitration and cities lose more." While Murray stated that the salary increases were "too high," he recommended that Council approve the pact because "it could be worse in overall in 312 arbitration." In his memo Murray also included statistics from the current Michigan League Newsletter which show the "high cost of compulsory ± arbitration" that cities usually incur as a result of arbitration with police. THE STATISTICS showed that in 32 cases reviewed under the last best offer arbitration procedure estab- lished in Michigan in 1972, arbitrators awarded salary hikes in the first contract year averaging 10.45 per cent for police. This figure exceeds Murray's request to city negotiators to hold all worker pay hikes to single digit percentages in order to meet stringent budget guidelines. See CITY, Page 7 Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Jagger jams Mick Jagger parades his familiar style, accompanied by guitarist Keith Richard, before 82,000 fans in jam-packed Cleveland Stadium as the Rolling Stones rocked Ohio last Saturday night in a,22-song per- formance. See related story and photographs on Page 5. Meal op tioscurtaled By ELAINE FLETCHER The University plans to sharply curtail the dormitory meal rebate option as part of an effort to reduce housing costs for next fall, according to University Housing Director John Feldkamp. Under the new procedure, which Keldkamp estimates will save the dorm system $40-$50,000, students re- questing meal rebates for reasons of conscience would be required to submit evidence of their beliefs from a recognized "spiritual leader" and a diet they plan to follow. AS FOR THE "avante-garde believer," Feldkamp commented, "I don't think we're about set to accept the individual faiths," and indicated that he expected the number of student rebates approved for reasons of conscience to number "no more than 100" next year. Feldkamp wavered on whether he would allow stu- dents affected by the new plan to cancel their dorm contracts. "I'm not ready to say a firm yes or no," he insisted despite the fact that the rebate decision came after the cancellation deadline. The meal rebate program, which began four years ago to reimburse Black Muslim and Kosher students, provided grocery money for over 400 students last year, who for one reason of conscience or another, couldn't stomach the dorm fare. PROPOSALS for tightening the restrictions, increas- ingly lax over the years, have been discussed by the Housing Cost Reduction Committee for the past month. This student-administration group was devised by Feldkamp to discuss ways to reduce the Housing Of- fice's projected $250,000 deficit in next year's budget. The new meal rebate procedure met student oppo- sition in the committee, according to member Irving Freeman. "We didn't vote," Freeman said, "we dis- cussed it. He (Feldkamp) felt there wasn't enough See DORM, Page 7