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Classified Pages 23-27 World, National News r Pages 21, 31, 32 Pages 32, 33 Thursday THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1979 $347.6 Billion Federal Budget OKd; Attempt to Trim 2% Fails ASSOCIATED PreSS Guards, armed with submachine guns, surround Pope John Paol E in Ankara ... Turkish government orders heavy security Pope in Turkey To Nurture Ties * New York Times News Service ANKARA, Turkey - Pope John Paul H flew to this over- whelmingly Moslem: country Wednesday morning in an ef- fort to give new impetus to the slow-moving reconciliation be- tween the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Ortho- dox churches. In a statement upon leaving Rome and in a series of short talks with correspondents aboard his plane during the flight, the pontiff made it clear that he sees the promotion of the ecumenical unity among Christians as the primary and perhaps only objective of this trip. He seemed intent -on dis- couraging any thought that he might be able to use this trip to make his influence felt in Teh- ran and to ease the fate of American hostages there or, generally, induce a calmer mood in the Islamic world. The pope is to spend three days in Turkey. The religious part of the visit -- his meetings with the Di- mitrios I, the Orthodox ecume- nical patriarch, will begin in Istanbul today. It will have its high point Friday when the two men will celebrate together the Feast of St. Andrew, the pa- tron of the Eastern Church and brother of the Apostle Peter. First Capital Visit John Paul I is the first Ro- man Catholic pope to visit the capital of Turkey. His pre- decessor, Paul VI,.went to Is- tanbul in 1967 for ecumenical talks with Orthodox church leaders there. From the moment the pope's chartered airliner touched down at Ankara Airport Wednesday morning it was clear that his stay in Turkey was going to be strikingly dif- ferent from his triumphal vi- Charges Report On Jordan Canceled WASHINGTON (AP} - The expected release of a report in connection with alleged co- caine use by Hamilton Jordan was canceled Wednesday shortly after the Justice De partment said there would be an announcement in the case. There was no explanation for the change in plans other than a brief statement by the de- partment, which said the sche- duled announcement was \pre- A special three-judge court is reviewing Attorney General Benjamin R. Civiletti's report on the question of whether a special prosecutor should be appointed to investigate al- legations that Jordan, the White House chief of staff, used cocaine on three occasions. Called Premature Chief Justice Department spokesman Robert Smith said, ''We were put on the alert by the court. It turns out the com- munication was premasture. The court Intends to take no | action today.\ Smith said neither be nor the attorney general knew the re- sons why the court had post- poned making an announce jf meat. Jordan had steadfastly de ried that be had been review- @ ing Civiletti's recommenda- i tion, which was submitted fol lowing a preliminary inves- tigation by the FBL The special court was creat ed to help administer a law sits to the United States, Ire- land, Poland and Mexico. No jubilant flag-waving cheering crowds were waiting at the airport. The wind-swept tarmac was empty except for an honor guard of Turkish sol- diers, a government delegation headed by President Fahri Ko- roturk and some 200 reporters. Troops and armed police- men in large numbers held strategic positions in what Turkish journalists said was the largest security operation they had seen here for a fo- reign visitor. Clusters of passengers walt- ing in the arrival hall for their delayed planes watched the pope's arrival with apparent indifference. In the early evening Turkish officials reported that several hundred youths had been rounded up after two demon- strations against the pope took place in downtown Ankara. The pope apparently was una- ware of the protests, one of which occurred while he was at the airport 30 miles away. The second came while he was laying a wreath at the mauso- leum of Mustapha Kemal Ata- turk, the founder of modern Turkey, in another part of the city. <its own budget, and further AP-CP-REUTER-NY TIMES $203,000 Heist CLEVELAND, Tenn. {(AP) - Five gunmen sur- prised two Wells Fargo guards at a cale Wednes- day, then unloaded 23 sacks of money containing $203,000 from an armored truck and fled, authorities said. Officers said no one was Injured and the bandits did not fire any shots. The Bradley County sheriff's of- fice at first reported that four gunmen were involved, but later said a fifth par- ticipated. Envoy Kidnapped SAN SALVADOR, El Sal- vador (AP) - A group of about 10 guerrillas, some armed with submachine guns and pistols, kidna South African Ambassador Archibald Gardner on Wednesday, police said. Witnesses said the band, made up of both men and women, grabbed the 60- year-old Gardner as he left his embassy and forced him into a waiting car, which sped away. ¢ 1979 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON - The feder- al government finally got a budget Wednesday, almost two months after the start of the 1980 fiscal year, The $547.6 billion spending plan was adopted by the House of Representatives, 206 to 186, after Democrats had defeated a Republican proposal to trim spending by 2 percent across the board. The budget, which does not require the presi- dent's signature, passed the Senate before Thanksgiving. However, Congress has yet to prove that it can live within battles are likely next year, as pressures mount to raise the spending ceilings enacted Wednesday. Fear Crisis in Spring ''We're going to have a crisis in the spring, I'm afraid,\ said Rep. Robert N. Giaimo, chair- man of the Budget Committee, ''Unless we do something be- tween now and then to save money.\ Wednesday's vote culminat- ed a process that began last January, when President Cart- er proposed a budget of $531.6 billion, with a deficit of $29 bil- lion. Congress then set tenta- tive spending targets last spring of $532 billion, with a deficit of only $23 billion. But since then, the declining economy has forced an in- crease in government spend- ing, particularly in such areas as food stamps and unemploy- ment compensation. Accord- ingly, Wednesday's budget as- sumes a deficit of $29.8 billion, just below the \magic num- ber\ of $30 billion,.the figure that many lawmakers said was politically unaccaptable. Final passage of the budget was held up by a dispute over an obscure provision in the budget act called \reconcilia- tlon.\ In effect, this is a formal order directing committees to make specific spending cuts in order to meet budget targets. Compromise Language The Senate, which predicts that spending could exceed the budget by $3.6 billion, thvored the order, while the house op- posed it. The budget- adopted Wednesday omits the formal reconciliation order but con- tains compromise language in which Congress, in effect, pro- mises to try to adhere to its budget. we so much to gv each *2 4 WARMEST: OUR BUNNY CUDDLERS! Heat and mobility in one neat package . . . easy-care acrylic pile chin-to-toes! We have two hot styles for you, both with detachable feet: A. without drop seat, in blue, red, hot pink, bright yellow S-M-L-XL . . . B. with drop seat, in pastel pink, blue or maize S-M-L. Intimate Apparel, all stores; Second Floor Downtown. 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