Page 4-Thursday, July 22, 1982-The Michigan Doily House passes bill tobuild MX *misies WASHINGTON (AP)- The House yesterday narrowly endorsed President Reagan's proposal to begin production of the MX missile without a basing plan for it, then hours later solidly supported his request for a new fleet of Lockheed Corp. C-5B cargo planes. Acting on amendments to a $177.1 billion defense authorization bill, the House voted 212-209 to accept a proposal that would earmark $1.14 billion for production of the first nine MX missiles but put a temporary hold on $260 million of that amount until the administration makes a decision on how to base the weapon. Reagan and Pentagon officials have promised that the decision will be for- warded to Congress in December. REP. SAMUEL Stratton (D-N.Y.) of- fered the MX amendment as a sub- stitute to a measure by Reps. Nicholas Mavroules (D-Mass.) and Beverly Byron (D-Md.) that would have removed all production funds for the missile from the bill. The Senate voted to delete MX production money in May. In early evening, after nearly five hours of debate, the House defeated, 289-127, an amendment to delete $510 million from the $860 million the bill earmarked for the first of 50 Lockheed C-5B and use the other $350 million to buy Boeing 747 planes for long-haul cargo use. THE AIRPLANE issue emerged as the most fiercely lobbied military- hardware issue in the defense bill, and the sales pitches picked up steam after the Senate last May chose the 747 over the C-5B in a floor fight. The two choices will have to be reconciled by a conference committee that eventually will iron out differences in the Senate and House versions of the overall authorization bill. Billions of dollars and thousands of jobs for an airplane industry suffering from a dearth of commercial-airliner business are at stake in the final decision, and Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger has threatened to buy no cargo planes at all if Congress chooses the 747. Pokand eases martial law, frees 1000 prisoners (Continued fromPage) There must be peace in the country." Poland's Roman Catholic Primate, Archbishop Jozef Glemp, had suggested John Paul might visit Poland some time before September 1983. Jaruzelski said the government was willing to go "half-way" to meet the need for "self-governing and indepen- dent" trade unions. But he said they should "look after matters of working people on the shop floor and in in- dividual branches of the economy," and not resemble Solidarity as it was before the martial law crackdown in Decem- ber. Jaruzelski offered no clemency to a second category of martial law victims - people who have been arrested since December 13 and sentenced to long jail terms for offenses like work stoppages, participating in demonstrations, and passing out leaflets. The internees were picked up and held without trial or charges just as the crackdown oc- curred. White House officials left open whether the Polish action would be suf- ficient to prompt Reagan to relax the sanctions he imposed after martial law was declared December 13. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes stressed the United States will look for the promises of the Polish military officials to be "borne out in action." Speakes said President Reagan and his advisers had not fully assessed the steps in Warsaw by Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski, who announced relaxed martial law regulations and the release of 1,227 interned dissidents. "Clearly, the release of the detainees was a major concern," said one White House official who asked not to be iden- tifiled. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Scotland Yard hunts terrorists LONDON (AP) - Scotland Yard said yesterday it has descriptions provided by a witness and is on the track of IRA terrorists who planted a deadly car bomb at Hyde Park. Prime Minsiter Margaret Thatcher, visiting some of the 50 people wounded in two explosions, vowed "never to give in" to terrorism. No arrests had been made and police said they had few clues to Tueday's second IRA bombing, at Regent's Park, which killed six army musicians. Three soldiers died in the Hyde Park bombing of a procession of Household Cavalrymen on their way to the ceremonial Changing of the Guard. Police tightened security throughout London and at ports and airports, and repeated a warning to legislators to be n the alert for bombs, letter- bombs and assassination attempts. Two weeks ago intelligence from Ireland had warned of a new IRA blitz in Britain, police confirmed. The Irish Republican Army, fighting to end British rule in Northern Ireland, said it planted the bombs to remind Britain that the Irish people had "sovereign and nation rights which no task or occupational force can put down" Crane collapse kills one, injures nine in Manhattan A construction crane atop a43-story mid-Manhattan skyscraper collapsed yesterday, raining rock, metal, and glass on pedestrians and buildings below. One man was killed and nine people suffered minor injuries. A two-ton, 30-foot piece of the crane was left dangling over East 53rd Street by a single metal tube, forcing the evacuation of at least seven nearby buildings and the closing of some of New York's busiest streets. Fire officials noted that the toll could have been much worse. The crane gave way just before 11 a.m., an hour before thousands of workers poured in- to the streets for the lunch hour. Eyewitnesses told of pieces of masonry flying through office windows; of a pool of blood where one police officer said the dead man, Warren Levenberg, a circus employee, "got his head crushed in" by a falling chunk of metal, and, mostly, of an awesome noise. Levenberg, 31, of Vienna, Virginia, had been controller of Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus for six years. The father of two was struck down as he walked to a meeting at a nearby building, said circus president Kenneth Feld. Economy shows slight recovery WASHINGTON- The U.S. economy is finally creeping ahead after skid- ding in reverse since lastsummer, the government reported yesterday. But there was no hint yet of the robust recovery that has followed past recessions. Reagan administration officials acknowledged that the recovery, assuming it is on the way, may be less than they expected and certainly less than has been typical in the past. New Commerce Department figures showed the economy-as measured by inflation-adjusted gross national product-growing at an annual rate of 1.7 percent in the April-June quarter. That was a big improvement over declines at annual rates of 5.3 percent and 5.1 percent in the final quarter of last year and the first three months of 1982. Robert Dederick, a commerce official, said flatly that although better times seem to lie ahead, "we don't look for a rapid recovery." Iraq repulses Iranian air raid Iraq announced yesterday that Iranian planes attacked the Iraqi capital of Baghdad, but said the raid was repulsed by missiles and one Iranian Phan- tom jet was shot down. A military spokesman said the pilot of the downed plane was killed and the co-pilot was taken prisoner. Iran claimed its aircraft bombed Iraqi oil facilities in Baghdad and caused heavy casualties and damage. It conceded one jet crashed due to "technical difficulty." In the ground war, Iraq said it inflicted heavy losses on Iranian troops east of the oil port of Basra. An official communique spoke of 1,942 Iranians kiled and 15 tanks destroyed in action Tuesday night an yesterday. There was no independent verification of the conflicting reports from Iran and Iraq and reporters were not allowed in the war zone. New PLO plan revealed Lebanon's state radio said yesterday a new plan was under discussion to evacuate Arafat's fighters to locations in northern and eastern Lebanon as well as Syria, pending arrangements to disperse them among 21 Arab League nations. The Lebanese state radio said the new plan under consideration by U.S. presidential envoy Phillip Habib and Lebanese mediators calls for deployment of multinational forces in buffer zones between the Isralies and the guerrillas. PLO guerrillas would then withdraw from west Beirut to PLO camps on the southern edge of the city under United Nation's supervision, and Israeli forces would withdraw to Damour, 10 miles south of Beirut, to clear the highway for guerrilla evacuees, according to the broadcast. I COMMISSIONER re-elect { Gida Faye DEMOC RAT Republican moderation is a myth - "Spending county funds for an illusionary defense against nuclear attack is a cruel hoax." Cooperation among Democrats is a necessity. Vote August 10th. Paid for by theCerald Faye Committeey. ighrnondBrowne, Treasurer, 1400 Traver, Ann Arbor