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December 04, 1974 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1974-12-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Page Three

Peugeot
will bu
Citroen with
French loan'
PARIS (P) - The F r e n c h
government announced yester-
day it is lending nearly $300
million to reorganize the sag-f
ging automobile industry and
save Citroen from bankruptcyr
Citroen, one of the world's
oldest auto companies and
France's third largest, will be
taken over by Peugeot, the
country's No. 2 auto maker.
Peugeot made the merger de-
pendent on a $200 million gov-
ernment loan to cover the debts
of Citroen.
STATE-OWNED R e n a u l t,
France's largest auto firm,
agreed to buy Berliet, a Citroen!
subsidiary specializing in heavy
trucks, earthmoving equipment
and buses. Renault will make r
the purchase with its own funds r
and a government loan of more
than $90 million.
In both cases, the new part-
ners said, the individual brands
of Citroen and Berliet, their
dealer networks and outside in-
dustrial agreements w91 be
maintained. Savings are sup-f
posed to come in management
structures, joint purchasings
and development planning.
Socialist leader Francois Mit- Former George Gov. Lester Maddox looksc
terrand and the Communist-led eatery in Atlanta, Ga. The Pickrick which o
General Confederation of Labor, career 10 years ago when he chased blacks
the nation's largest union, im- as he sliced apple pie before just openingI
mediately called for the ailing I might just set up a special room for segr
companies to be nationalized. integration."
But the government showed no - _----- --- -
/sign of heeding the call.
NEGOTIATIONS had been in SECRET COMMITMENT:
progress for nearly six months
for Peugeot to take over Cit-
roen, which is controlled by
Michelin, the family owned Il
French tire giant. Berliet h.dY

Ethiopian govt. hunt
terrorists in capital
By AP and Renter s,fetv was not being threatened.
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - THE RULING military council
Addis Ababa went into a vir- executed 60 members of Ethio-'
tual state of siege yesterday as pia's former feudal regime on
Ethiopia's military government Nov. 23 and was expected to
arrested eight more persons in I shoot more in reprisal for the
the continuing hunt for te-ror- .bomb attacks, which erupted
ists setting off bombs in public Saturday and so far h a v e
buildings. killed about eight persons.
This brings to 17 the total
number detained in the past But the Ethiopian Embassy in
two days. All those arrested London said its government'
have been charged with crimes "has never contemplated" exe-
against the state and will be cuting deposed Emperor Haile
tried by special military tri- Selassie, and said the 82-year-
btinals, which have pows to old former monarch "is receiv-
Simpose the death nenalty. ing humane treatment."
THEREHAVE beenaseveral Haile Selassie and abo'it 150
bomb explosions in Addis Ababa other members of the old re-
since Saturday night. At least gime are being held in the:
five people were reported klcd Grand Palace in Addis Ababa.
and more than 10 injured when I Military trials for the 150 were
two bombs went off within min- expected to begin today, but the
utes of each other at a hotel council postponed them without
and the city hall. explanation and did not say
A fuel storage tank at Addis when they would take place.
Ababa was blown up SatudavI The military council blamedj
but no casualties were renorreJ Haile Selassie supporters f o rj
Sources close to the criminal explosions in the City Hall and
investigations department in a downtown hotel Monday, but
Addis Ababa said they beli2 eed other sources believe the bombs

University Housing Council
Fall Term Elections Dec. 11-20
DURING PRE-REGISTRATION
At Waterman Gym
Candidates may register in SGC Offices-
3909 Mich. Union until 5 p.m., Dec. 6.
Questions? Call Greg Higby, 764-7668

I -

STEVE'S LUNCH
1313 SO. UNIVERSITY
Home Cooking Is Our Specialty

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Breakfast All Day
3 eggs, Hash Browns,
Toast & Jelly--$1.05
Ham or Bacon or
Sausage with 3 eggs,
Hash Browns, Toast and
jelly-$1 .50
3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak,
Hash Browns,
Toast & Jelly-$2.10

Specials This Week
Beef Stroganoff
Chinese Pepper Steak
Home-made Beef Stew
Eaa Rolls
Home-made Soups (Beef,
Barley. Clam Chowder, etc.)
Chili, Veqetable Tempura
(served after 2 p.m.)
Hamburqer Steak Dinner-
('/2 lb.).......$1.89
Spaqhetti in Wine Sauce
Beef Curry Rice
Delicious Korean Bar-q Beef
(served after 4 Daily)

FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE

the bomb attacKs were the work and another one set off Satur-j
of elements of the Eritrean Ah- day night were the work of the
eration Front, +he guerrill i r- Eritrean Liberation Front,
ganization w h i c h has been which has threatened to carry'
fighting for the secession of tie which has threatened-to--arry

;1

suniyI1

AP Photo
es it good
over a piece of chicken at his new integrated
pened yesterday. Maddox launched his political
from his segregated cafeteria. But Maddox said
th- cafeteria doors, "I'm still a segregationist.
eg-tionists and another room for those that want
V gypt to

been seeking a buyer ff some
18 months.1
As Peugeot delved into Cit-
roen 's books, it got more and
more concernedabout the com-
pany's losses, and finally d e-
manded that the government
step in and get rid of the debt
burden. The two loans will be
for 15 years at 9.75 per cent in-
terest.
The combined Peugeot-Citroen
operation will have an output
about equal to that of Renault,
which makes 1.4 million vehi-
cles a year.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY I
Volume LXXXV, No. 74
Wednesday, December 4, 1974
Is edited and managed by students
at the University of Michigan. News
phone 764-0562. Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106.
Published d a i s y Tuesday through
Sunday morning during the Univer-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann
Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription
rates: $10 by carrier (campus area);
$11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio);
$12 non-local mail (other states and
foreign).
Summer session published Tues-
day through Saturday morning.
Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier
(campus area); $6.00 local mail
(Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non-

w

northern province of Eritr-a far
more than 10 vears.
HEAVILY armed troops pa-
trolled Addis Ababa, some of
them with special orders to
shoot violators of the 9 p.m.
curfew. Government buildings
were under heavy guard and
some were closed to the nuolic.
Employes were searched by
soldiers as they reported f o r
work. Elevators and empty
rooms were locked in many of-
fices.
Visitors had their handbags
searched at entrances to tourI.t
hotels and underwent personal
searches in a specially erected
curtained booth in the lobby of
one luxury hotel.
Among those arested was M4ij.
1Gen. Tedla Makonnen. Ile is a
friend of Count Bekelese, who
was detained following a gunE
battle Monday on charges of
plotting against the Government.
The West Germany govern-
ment said it will not send any
more development and aid per-
sonnel to Ethiopia becausc of'
the turbulent situation in t h e
country. But it said the 45 Gr-
man development workers and
their families now in El- iopia
will not be recalled since their
U

its 10-year-old campaign for the
independence of northern Eri-
trea province to Addis Ababa.

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U OFM SKI CLUB MEETING
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4-8 p.m.
ASSEMBLY HALL (in the Union)

FILM ON BANFF

(destination for Christmas trip)

I

SUN. 9-8
CLOSED MON.
TUES.-SAT. 8-8
769-2288
1213 SO UNIVERSITY
STEVE'S LUNCH

IPtf

her 1

the Suez

By The Associated Press
Israel said yesterday that
Egypt gave it a secret commit-
ment to let Israeli cargo pass
through the Suez Canal once the
waterway is reopened.j
Israeli ships have never been
allowed through the canal,
which was completely blocked
by war debris during the1967
Middle East War. Egypt says
the waterway will reopen next
year.
FOREIGN Minister Yigal Al-
Ion told the Israeli parliament'
inJerusalem that the commit-,
ment on cargo was an unpub-
lished part of the disengage-
ment of forces agreement sign-
ed last January.j
He said Egypt agreed that
ships flying the Israeli flag
would be permitted through the
canal after a further peace step
had been reached. But he did
not say what that step was.
The Israeli government was
under public pressure last Jan-
uary not to accept any disen-

. ..

gagement agreement that did
not guarantee Israeli shipping!
through the canal.3
BUT ALLON, answering ques-
tions in Parliament, defended
the decision to accept the par-
tial peace pact by saying not all;
the issues of the Middle East
conflictscould be settled in the
initial stage.
Responding to another ques-
tion, Allon said Israel would
welcome renewed diplomatic,
relations with the Soviet Union
and other Communist bldc na-
tions, but said no feelers from
those countries, which broke'
ties with Israel during the 1967
war, have been received.
In an another development,
Israel accused Egyptians of
digging channels on the east
bank of the Suez Canal that
could be used for launching mis-
siles
A MILITARY spokesman in

Tel Aviv said Israel filed a
complaint with the U. N. Emer-
gency Force and that U. N. ob-
servers sent a team to check it
out. There was no immediate
comment from Egyptian or U.
N. officials.
The charge came 24 hours
after Egyptian and Soviet offic-
ials in London reported negotia-
tions for the delivery of a 460-
megawatt Soviet nuclear reac-
tor to Egypt were nearing com-
pletion.
Egypt's ambassador in Lon-
don, Saad el Shazly, said in a
television interview Tuesday
that Katzir's remarks "have
created an atmosphere of in-
stability." He also said no coun-
try, Egypt included, would al-
low neighbors to possess nu-
clear capabilities without hav-
ing the right to build its own
nuclear potential.

START THE NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT-
Join the Ski Club in the Canadian Rockies, ski
at Canada's largest ski area.
Airfare, lifts, accommodations, and ground
transportation included for $300
January 2-January 8

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IHE YE ARID(I I IL ALL-AMERICAN

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o"m..."rrr.".-r "" ..* " " "
DAILY OFFICIAL BUULETIN

Day Calendar

I the Traveling Salesperson Problem,"

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25% OFF NEW BOOKS
USED & RARE BOOKS
9 a.m.-12 Midnight
7 Days a Week
529 E. Liberty
663-8441

Wednesday, December 4
WUOM: Edward Goldsmith, au-
thor of Blueprint for Survival, "The'
Next Civilization," last in series,
"The Consequences of No-Growth
Policies," 10:05 am.
Computing Seminar: Brown bag,
T. Teorey, CICE, "Systems Approach
to Operating Systems Modeling," 130
P&A Bldg., noon.
Pendleton Arts Information Ctr.:
Open hearth, "Feminist Theatre,
Pendleton Ctr., Union, noon. j
ACRICS: Criser Arena, 315 pm.E
Physics: Alan Krisch, "Spin De-
pendence of High Energy p-p Scat-
tering,"P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm.
Statis ics: wm. Cleveland, Bell
Lab, "Clustering by Identification
with Special Application to Two-
Way Tables of Counts," 3227 An-
gell, 4 pm.
Industrial & Operations Engineer-
ing: D. J. Rosenkrantz, General
Electric Research & Development
Ctr., "Approximate Alogrithms for

229 W. Eng., 4 pm.
Washtenaw Student Nurses Assoc.:
Sally Lechitner, "Legislation:HIts
Impact on Nursing," S. Lecture Hall,
Med. Set. II, 7 pm.
MARC: Petrach Conference, Thos.
Greene, Yale, "Petrach and the Hu-
manis Hermaneutic," Rackham, 8
pm.
Benzinger Library: Carl Proffer,
"Suicideuin Russian Poetry,"
Greene Lounge, E. Quad. 8 pm.
Musket: Original musical comedy,
McLaughlin and Ford's "Jericho,"
Mendelssohn, 8 pm.
Music School: Opera workshop,
Recital Hall, 8 pm.
PTP: Showcase series, Dean's "The
Sty of the Blind Pig," Arena Thea-
tre, Frieze, 8 pm.
General Notices
December 1974 Teacher's Certifi-
cate Candidates: All of the re-
quirements for the teacher's certifi-
cate must be completed by Decem-
ber 20th; teacher's oath should be
taken, 1225 School of Education im-
mediately; placement material ob-
tained from office in SAB.

All of as skiluums are
NO'T going downhil

The Romance Languages Department
The Medieval & Renaissance Collegium
and
The Comparative Literature Program
present
V hree Lectures for Pelrarch'
J%'YIJAI
'U 3 5fl
*JLffll11?

i _ -- ---- __ _ _ _ s

APPLY NOW
Term 1-1975-76
SHEFFIELD, KEELE,
EDINGBURGH, UNITED KINGDOM
16 HRS. CREDIT, EDUCATION
including 4 hrs. of student teaching accept-
ance, after interview, before Christmas
Contact 4124 S.E.B. or phone 764-5497

More and more of us
are into the quiet,
non-competitive relaxation
of cross-country skiing.
And in Ann Arbor, we have
a headquarters: TEE & SKI.
The skibums at TEE & SKI
will tell you all about the
joys of this ancient sport
that thousands are rediscovering:
It's great for the whole family.
It's peaceful.
It's easy.
It's cheap.
No fancy paraphernalia
to sink your next three
paychecks into.
The cross-country
skibum travels light.
I'm Dirk Bus.
I'm assistant manager
and cross-country skibum
at TEE & SKI.
I can help you
get started in this
beautiful winter sport.
But only if you1 ask.

I

DECEMBER 4
Professor Thomas M. Greene:
"Petrarch and the Humanist
Hermeneutic"

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Junior Year in Germany
at FREIBURG
First Informational Meeting

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RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER

DECEMBER 5
Professor Oscar Budel:
"The Uses of Illusion in Petrarch's
CANZON I ERE"

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