The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 30, 1979-Page 9 Chrysler's earnings expected to establish new record losses :-_: Announcing: LSA Student Government FALL ELECTIONS Nov. 19th and 20th AP Photo TENANTS OF THE Bunker Hill Towers apartment building in downtown Los Angeles stare out from their windows during the aftermath of a fire that broke out on the 11th floor of the building and took three lives. ALARM MALFUNCTIONS: :re in L.A. luxury ap s apart-ment ki s three (Continued from Page 1) SUFFERING FROM this spring's market shift to small cars, the flagging economy and enormous capital costs to meet government standards,Chrysler recorded a first quarter loss of $53.7 million and a second quarter deficit of $207.1 million. Chrysler's - larger U.S. com- petitors-General Motors Corp. and the Ford Motor Co.-both reported dramatic declines in earnings in the third quarter because of similar pressures. GM and Ford both said the dealer cash incentives they were forced to provide to sell off inventories of full- sized and intermediate cars con- tributed to the drop in earnings. CHRYSLER IS in even worse shape in that regard, having topped off its dealer incentives with direct cash rebates. The ailing company weeks ago prepared its stockholders, suppliers, bankers, unions and government of- ficials for a bleak third quarter report. It announced publicly in September its 1979 losses would exceed $700 million. Then, in documents filed with the government, it said its losses could exceed $1 billion this year and reach $482 million in 1980. IT PROJECTED a return to profitability in 1981 with earnings of $393 million. The company is seeking loan guaran- tees from the federal government to tide it over until i> brings out its 1981 cars. The company originally asked for is preserved on The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND Graduate Library $1.2 billion in guarantees, but lowered the request to $750 million at the gover- nment's request. It was later reported the ad- ministration has decided not to recom- mend a specific aid figure-a move Chrysler supporters interpreted as meaning the company could receive underwriting for more than $750 million. The largest previous losses by U.S. corporations were $451.8 million by the Singer Co. in 1975, $448.2 million by Bethlehem Steel Corp. in 1977, and $431.2 million by the Penn Central Transportation Co. in 1970. CANDIDATES: Pick up applications SG Office, 4003 Michigan Union. applications to MSA, 3909 Union. Applications due by 5:00 p.m. Nov. 8th r L 7 LOS ANGELES (AP)-A man and a woman trapped by flames on an 11th- floor ledge of their luxury apartment buildirfg screamed for help and then leaped to their deaths with their pet dog, authorities said yesterday. A third resident died of smoke inhalation. The couples was driven onto the out- side ledge as flames ate through the floor of their apartment of the Bunker Hill Towers, a downtown complex. Fire officials said newly installed fire alar- ms apparently malfunctioned and tailed to rouse some sleeping tenants. "THE WOMAN LEFT screaming,. 'For God's sake, someone help me,"' .said one witness, Elizabeth Senia. "The last thing she said was, 'Oh my God, the flames are coming through the floor.' I saw one body jump, and then she jumped." The bodies were found in a crumpled, at LSA- Turn in bloody heap with the body of their dog in a courtyard on the east side of the complex. The names of the victims were not immediately released. FIRE DEPARTMENT spokesmen said arson had been ruled out as a cause of the 3 a.m: blaze and that a cigarette left smoldering in overstuffed furniture was suspected of starting the fire. A third victim, Sidney Karton, 44, ap- parently was overcome by smoke in a hallway after he fled his anartment His body was found in the 11th floor hall. The fire sent several residents scurrying into the street in their night- clothes but most stayed inside their apartments, avoiding the dense smoke in the hallways. The fire apparently was confined mostly to two apartments on the 11th floor, but thick smoke permeated all levels of the building., Ta ke the first ste WIN TWO STATE 1-2-3 MIDNIGHT SH TICKETS! Simply find your na address in the Michiga Classified Ads. Details Classified Page. Should be advertising in the Daily Classifieds w-4 Over 34,000 SOW .(verage) Will Read It Every Day Place Your me and Ad Today n Daily on the Palacios interprets Chilean coup d'etat I I (Continued from Page 1), period that followed. The Allende government, elected in 1971, was the victim of inflation, due to the rise of oil prices, and a simultaneous drop in food production, due to disruptions caused by land redistribution; according to University History Professor Thomas Flory. ALLENDE'S POPULAR Unity government nationalized the Chilean copper industry, which comprises some 80 per cent of the country's foreign trade export credits. "They thought that if they did these things legally, the United States would let them get away with it," Palacios said. Palacios asserted that the Chilean Communist Party, an influential part of Allende's Popular Unity government, was used by the Soviet Union to advan- ce its own interests in Latin America. BUT THE U.S., which realized the true nature of the Allende government, engineered a coup d'etat to establish the present ruling military junta, Palacios said. He said the Allende government, .while holding legal power, failed to realize that it did not control the land, The means of production, or the army. The role of the CIA in the overthrow of the Allende government has been 4ell documented by the United Nations and the Organization of American States. THE BLOODSHED which followed the 1973 coup is also well known. Palacios estimated that 30,000 were killed outright, while 150,000 were im- prisoned. Flory said although these numbers were high, thousands were killed and arrested, and many forced to flee the country. The U.S. State Department maintains that the human rights violations have decreased in Chile, but torture and detention of some political prisoners continues. According to Flory, Palacios is one of a number of Chilean intellectuals who fled the country after Allende's gover- nment fell and his interpretation of events there in 1973 is one of many. 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