Saturday, July 12, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, July 12, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Cr al U. th re fo ir ar, th ai air bo House-panel votes to send arms to Turkey WASHINGTON (A)- The sale is the fact that U.S.-Turkey rattle the bases, the price goes ouse International Relations negotiations begin next week on op. We're going to violate U., onmittee voted yesterday to U.S. installations in Turkey, in- law because of the threat of tlow the limited resumption of cluding surveillance posts that base closings. S. arms shipments to Turkey. . watch Soviet activities. Sisco replied that thme admin The bill, approved 16 to 11 by Sisco also testified that he istrarrr ssas not proposing vio- e committee ould permit the could not guarantee that the latiro of the law against per- lease of ;185 millirm worth of arms sale would prompt Turkey mitting foreign use ) a U.S. wea- eapons Turkey had contracted to negotiate reduction of its oc pons for invasion or occupation r by Feb. 5, when Congress cupation forces on Cyprus but but rather was asking Congress nposed an embargo against all said it would create the climate to modify the law to bring sta- 'rs shipments to Turkey. for such negotiations. bility in the Mediterranean. THE BILL also would allow If the impasse between Greece REP. Benjamin S. Rosenthal and Turkey over Cyprus is not io addmtioat 'reapons sales (D-N.Y.) another aid opponent. broken, "instability in the east- i said the concession would show ern Mediterranean will in- Athorized by President Ford to ote- onre htwe lster Turkeys role in NATO r eyour crease;' he said. But any of the armaments sld on credit could not be de- livered until Congres acts on separate foreign aid legislation later this year, the committee stipulated. The limit was imposed to give Congress an opportunity to see whether the limited arms deliv- eries spur negotiations on with- drawal of Turkish forces from Cyprus before deciding whether to allow full-scale resumption of such sales. SPEAKER Carl Albert said the measure accepted by Presi- dent Ford and supported by most House leaders will be put to a full House vote week after next. But opponents, includng Rep. John Brademas (D-Ind.) con- tended yesterday that partial lifting of Congress' penalty for Turkey's Cyprus invasion would signal other countries that they can get away with using U.S. arms as they wish. "We would be telling any country buying arms from us that no holds are barred, that the arms can be used to attack their neighbors or any other country," Brademas told the committee. HE ALSO contended the arms sale "is tantamount to black- mail" to prevent Turkey from closing U.S. military bases. Undersecretary of State Jo- seph Sisco agreed under com- mittee questioning that the "im- mediate pressure" for the arms Rath"n iitieef on- troop withdValuvals BONN, West Germany (/P) - U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger flew here yesterday for talks with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and West German leaders amid dampened hopes for a weekend break-through on a Sinai troop withdrawal. Landing at the rainswept Co- logne-Bonn military airport, Kis- singer told newsmen, "I will bring the Israeli prime minister certain clarifications which he has requested." JUST HOURS before Kissin- ger's arrival, Rabin warned against expecting a quick ac- cord and said he was not under "magic deadline" pressure to agree to an Israeli-Egyptian in- terim agreement this weekend." Kissinger immediately went into a meeting with Bonn For- eign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher and planned to attend an evening garden party given by Chancellor Helmut Schmidt before going into a two-hour session with Rabin today. Earlier, Kissinger wound up 11 hours of talks in Geneva with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, who hinted that Mos- cow may be ready to agree to on-site inspection of its nuclear testing. The United States has long pressed for such inspec- tions. A JOINT statement said the Gromyko-Kissinger talks were- held in a "friendly atmosphere" and that "both sides believe that the exchange of views was con- structive and useful from the standpoint of further developing U.S-Soviet relations." Kissinger spoke of progress and "narrowing of differences" in the strategic arms discussions but said they would have to continue. Year-long, U.S.-mediated ef- forts to seal a Sinai accord are "a process of negotiations. We are in the middle," Rabin told a news conference. About the likely outcome today, he said: "I expect many outcomes." With Washington exerting pressure for an Israeli-Egyptian settlement soon;Kissinger hopes to reassure Rabin on several key issues the Israeli cabinet wants clarified before making a final decision. The cabinet meets in Jerusalem Sunday. Suspect held A police detective holds a suspect in a bank robbery in down- town Ypsilanti yesterday afternoon which resulted in the death of a city patrolman, Douglas Downing. One of the robbers was shot at the bank, two were captured and one is still at large. Ford calls economic recovery first priority for administration CHICAGO (41) - President Ford declared last night his administration's first order of business is full economic recovery but warned against a free-spending "quick fix" that would rekindle inflation. He said improvements in output, employment and other indicators mean "we are on the road to economic recovery." But he said "all neces- sary steps to make sure this recovery continues" must be accompanied by caution and restraint. "I WILL not spend the American people into more headaches and heartaches for a hollow vic- tory - a short-term period of economic resurg- ence that might last a year or, two," Ford said in a speech prepared for a Midwest business. group in Chicago. Just three days after he formally declared his 1976 presidential candidacy, Ford began a three- day, two-state, campaign-style swing that White House officials said was a non-political trip, paid for by the government. Before coming to Chicago, Fold's schedule fea- tured a ride in a parade commemorating the 49th National Cherry Festival in Traverse City, Mich. ON SATURDAY, he holds a news conference - to be locally brqadcast - in Chicago, meets with local Republican leaders and speaks at Chicago State University, Ford's audience in Chicago was the Mid-Amer- ican Committee for International Business and Government Cooperation. His theme once more was the need for fiscal restraint while spurring economic recovery and the danger of overspend- ing by the Democratic-controlled Congress. He said that moderation and restraint were the key words in his economic philosophy, declar- ing "they don't blow your mind. But neither will they blow the salary and savings you have worked for hard all your life." "THIS IS a delicate time, calling for carefully considered, deliberate decisions, for cautiously constructed long-range planning," Ford said. "If we are to have sustained growth, we must grow without inflation. "And if we are to avoid new, perhaps worse inflation than before, then our recovery policies must be based on fiscal restraint." "We must not permit government pump-prim- ing to break the economic dikes," he said. "False hopes must not be paraded before the American people - the promise of a quick fix - leaving them with empty illusions." THE PRESIDENT pledged to continue to steer what he called "a firm and steady course in economic policy" by vetoing what he considered unnecessary spending voted by Congress. . "Congress has been playing with fire - at- tempting to add huge amounts of spending that will rekindle inflation - and the veto is the President's constitutional means to put out the flames." Peron drops m ister from Argentine cabinet BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP - President Isabel Peron gave in to pressure from within and outside her government yesterday fnd dropped Jose Lopez Rega from the cabinet. :ie was considered the most powerful man in crisis-ridden Argentina. The president accepted 58-year-old Lopez Rega's resig- nation as social welfare minister and presidential secretary, but no mention was made of his position as personal secre- tary to Peron. That post, which he also held under her late husband and predecessor, was regarded as the important source of his behind-the-scenes power. FOR WEEKS military chiefs, Peronist labor and party leaders and wide segments of the public have insisted on Lopez Rega's ouster from the government, including his s private secretary's job. An official announcement said Peron accepted Lopez Rega's resignation from the cabinet "because of his insistent v requests" and that she thanked him for "very important and patriotic services." In his resignation Lopez Rega asked that it be accepted to secure the pacification of the disturbed spirits." FEELING against Lopez Rega had been so strong that play was nearly suspended at a football game Sunday be- cause fans would not stop chanting a slogan against him. One legislator challenged him to a duel and opponents accused him of links with a right-wing death squad and with mishandling public funds.