The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 54-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, August 1, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Brezhnev asks arms imits Seeks European troop cutbacks HELSINKI, Finland (P) -- Soviet leader Leonid 4v Brezhnev called yesterday for a reduction of ° :. armaments in central Europe as the next step in East-West detente but said the delicate pro- cess must be based on noninterference in each other's internal affairs. At the same time, Turkey turned down Presi- dent Ford's offer of $50 million in exchange for the reopening of American bases, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger announced. THE 68-year-old general secretary of the So- viet Communist party addressed 34 other leaders of Europe and North America on the second day of the European security conference, a pet Soviet project for the past two decades. 1 _ The Soviet Union and its East European satel- lites have billed the supersummit, the biggest gathering of world leaders since the Congress of Vienna in 1814-15, as a salvation for a continent drenched with blood through centuries of war. Brezhnev stressed this theme when he urged the leaders to give high priority to a search for "ways to reduce armed forces and armaments in central Europe without diminishing the secur- ity of anyone." BUT HE cautioned that the whole process of detente which helped bring the conference about would be endangered if any of the nations rep- resented here interfered in the internal affairs of another. Brezhnev said the noninterference clause is a major pillar of the nonbinding statement of prin- ciples the leaders are to sign Friday evening at the end of the conference. "No one should try to dictate to other peoples, on the basis of foreign policy considerations of one kind or another, the manner in which they ought to manage their internal affairs," the So- AP Photo viet leader said. Straight to the horse's mouth IT IS only the people of each given state, and no one else, that has the sovereign right to re- Philadelphia mounted patrolman Angelo Mendez shares an ice cream treat with his horse, Realtor, in an solve its internal affairs and establish its inter- effort to keep cool as high temperatures hit the area yesterday. nal laws. A different approach is a flimsy and See BREZNV, Page9 Gunman kills 1, wounds 2 in Ypsilanti shooting By TIM SCHICK HE WAS LISTED in serious condition late last YPSILANTI-A gunman at the Ford Motor Co. night at University Hospital following emergency parts plant here yesterday fatally shot the factory surgery. physician and wounded two other persons, one Vinson forced two Ford employes to leave the seriously, before he surrendered to police. building with him at gun point, but according to lDr. Robert Walting was shot and killed; ap- several witnesses was finally talked into giving parently as a result of a dispute over a workman's up by a minister employed in the plant's labor uunpnsainin cisim. s-suuusi r u..... I . lf- - ,lr , relations division. compensation claim. Alton Emermne, a ia or rei- tions supervisor in the medical clinic was wound- ed in the chest. EMERINE was reported in fair condition fol- lowing surgery in Ann Arbor's St. Joseph Hos- pital. As the gunman, identified by Ford officials as James Vinson, fled from the building where he seriously wounded Roland Seed, a vending coin- pany employe. Seed, a resident of Bay Village, Ohio, was using a telephone near the administration building lobby when he was shot in the head. POLICE OFFERED few details of the arrest, describing it only as "peaceful with no violence." Assistant Police Chief Jim Moore said he did not know the circumstances of the surrender. However, he said the revolver, of undetermined calibre, had been recovered and was undergoing laboratory balistic and fingerprint tests. Prosecutors are expected to charge Vinson with murder and two counts of assault With intent to commit murder at an arraignment scheduled today. See MAN, Page 5 -Ypsilanti Press photo by John Barton YPSILANTI Police Lt. Kenneth Holder (left) escorts shooting suspect, Jummy Lee Vinson, 27, of Ypsilanti, after the fatal shooting yesterday of the Ford company doctor and wounding of two others.