Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 18, 1975 downstairs FIRST TIME AT THE VILLAGE BELL-EVERY Kissinger, Gromyko confer on Mideast I TUESDAY IS PITCHER NIGHT. DOWN AND HAVE SOME FUN. COME ON TUESDAY: PITCHERS $2.25 village bell ,, GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - Secretary of State Henry Kis-1 singer and Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko ended two days of talks yesterday aimed at narrowing U.S.-Soviet differences on the Middle East and other issues. Gromyko told newsmen that on many subjects in the wide- ranging discussion "our posi- tions were close or coincide." "IT IS no secret, and I am sure that the secretary of state will agree, that our position on some others do not exactly coin- cide," he added. "I consider the talks to be fruitful for U.S.-Soviet relations and we are convinced for other states and for the international situation as well," Gromyko al- so said when Kissinger escorted him down from the secretary's hotel suite. Kissinger planned to see British leaders in London, then fly back to Switzerland for lunch today with Shah Moham- med Reza Pahlevi of Iran, who is on a ski trip. IT WAS understood that the subjects discussed by Gromyko and Kissinger included negotia- tions foragreements to limit nuclear arms and curtail under- ground nuclear tests and Soviet- American trade, in addition to the Mideast. Kissinger s a i d yesterday's talks covered implementation of the U.S.-Soviet summit agree- ment to set ceilings on nuclear weapons. Negotiators from both sides began work Jan. 31 draft- ing the details of the accord reached between President Ford and Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev when they met Nov. 23 in Vladivostok. Earlier, U.S. officials said the Soviets so far had not been "actively obstructionist" in Kis- singer's efforts to obtain another Israeli withdrawal in the Sinai in return for tangible moves by Egypt toward acceptance of the existence of Israel. HOWEVER, the Soviets have renewed pressure for early re- sumption of the Geneva peace conference, which the United States opposes for fear it would break down into a dispute over; Palestinian participation. Despite the Soviet position,I Kissinger is going ahead with his attempt to negotiate another Israeli-Egyptian agreement. On the basis of his exploratory talks in Jerusalem and Cairo last week, he plans toreturn to the Middle East about March 10 to undertake negotiations be- tween the two capitals. AP Photo Excuse me, professor Margaret Truman Daniel and former Arkansas senator J. William Fulbright chat last night prior to the winter convocation of George Washington University. Fulbright was the graduA- tion speaker at the school, and Daniel received on honorary Doctor of Letters degree. Chrysler loses $73 million 10 UTES PAUL GERNI POCKET BILLIARDS Exhibition-FREE Thurs., 4 & 8 p.m. Union Ballroom Kissinger also conferred yes- DETROIT ()-Chrysler Corp. terday with Roger Gallopin, lost a stunning $73.5 million in president of the executive coun- the fourth quarter of 1974, giv- cil of the International Commit- ing it a net loss of $52 million tee of the Red Cross about for the year. Americans missing in Indo- In their year-end report yes- china. Kissinger reportedly told terday, the firm blamed the Gallopin that the United States gasoline shortages of the early appreciates Red Cross efforts part of the year, inflation and on behalf of 2,300 Americans un- later recession for the poor per- accounted for in Indochina, in- formance. cluding 900 listed officially as THE LOSS was the largest missing in action. for any quarter or year in Chrysler's history. Previous rec- San Jose State University, ord's were $29.6 million in 1958, S Uincluding a $34.1 million lass in San Jose, Calif., is the oldest the third quarter. public college on the West Chrysler is expected to be theI Coast. only car maker reporting a lossE for 1974. General Motors earned sharp reversal from 1973, when $950 million; Ford'has yet to Chrysler earned $255 million, in- report and American Motors cluding $74.4 million in the final finished its fiscal year ended period. Oct. 30 with profits of $27 mil- Teetering on the brink of fi- lion. nancial ruin and apparently see- Chrysler dollar sales in 1974 ing continued bad times in early were $11 billion, down from 1975, Chrysler said it has made $11.8 billion a year earlier. Total special c r e d i t arrangements vehicle sales slumped to 2.3 mil- with nearly 200 U.S. banks. lion from the record 3.5 million The firm said its financing in 1973. subsidiary, Chrysler Financial SALES IN the fourth q'iarter Corp., has also entered into a were $2.5 billion, down from $300 million stand-by credit ar- $3.4 billion in the 1973 period. rangement with a group of 19 The year's loss marked a major U.S. banks. DAILY OFFICIAL BULIETIN In the time it takes to drive responsible for killing young people r-U-K---- ---R, your friend home, you could save are most often other young people. DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y his life. Take ten minutes. Or twenty. BOX 2345 If your friend's been drinking Or an hour. Drive your friend ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852 too much, he shouldn't be driving, home. That's all. If you can't do I want to save a friend's life.E The automobile crash is the that, call a cab. Or let him sleep on Tell me what else I can do. number one cause of death of your couch . I My name is__ people your age. And the ironic We're not asking you to be Addres_ thing is that the drunk drivers a doctor or a cop. Just a friend. city _ _ Stat e Zip "YMMStHIGHWAY SAPETY ADVIS ORYCOMMrr , IFYOU LETA FRIEND DRIVE DRUNK,YOU'RE NO FRIEND. \ 3. DPAIW1i 0'TOFMNSPORTAtYOr.." NAT14N ALN4GHWAY TNAPi'CSAFETY ADMNRjNUT911 Use Daily Classifieds BIG 3 Pre-Inventory Reference BOOK SALE TODAY AT FOLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOK STORE STATE ST., End of Diag NEW TITLES ADDED DAILY' Katy Mellen. Graduated in 71 with a B.S. in Textiles and Clothing. Doing well - and moving forward - in Car- gill's commodity Marketing D vision GROWTH Graduating Seniors and M.B.A.'s: Accounting " Agriculture Business . Engineering - Liberal Arts Cargill-at the leading edge. Active in agricul- tural, industrial, and consumer commodities and products, and in a variety of other related businesses. You could be there! We need top people for a wide range of positions, careers that lead to management. Our policy is to stimulate leadership potential. To encourage personal creativity. To recognize and reward individual achievement. And to promote from within A Corgill representative will be interviewinq on campus February 26. Check with the placement office now for the dates and location. Look into leadership! Tuesday, February 18 Day Calendar WUOM: Stanley Payne, History prof., U of Wisconsin, "Succession in Spain." 10:05 am. Med. Ctr. Commission for Women Meeting: C3086 Outpatient, noon. Maternal, Child Health Films; This is Larry, M1112 SPH II, noon. CEW: Coping with Reentry series, "Within Yourself," last session, 330 Thompson St., noon-2 pm. STAFS Seminar: J. Eisley, A. Sussman, "Institutional Obstacles to a Desirable Future in Higher Edu- cation." E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, noon-2 pm. Environmental Studies: R. Price, "Constrained Social Situations and Cost," 4001 CC Little, 3 pm. Ctr. Coordination Ancient ,Mod- ern Studies: H. D. Cameron, "Pe- tronius' Satriicon." 2408 Mason, 4 pm. Near East. Studies; Ctr. N. East., N. African Studies; Comp. Lit.: Ar- nold Band, "Love and Family in Agnon's Literature,'- Leo. Rm. 2, MLB, 4 pm. English, Ext. Service: Poetry read- ing, Herbert Scott, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 pm. Anthropology Museum, Ctr. for Afro-Amer., African Studies: Thurs- ton Shaw, Cambridge, England, "Origins of African Agriculture," A, Angell, 4-6 pm; "The Archaeo- logical Discoveries at Igbo-Ukwu, Nigeria, with Special Reference to Dating," Lee. Rm. 2, MLB, 8-10 pm. -ame JEWISH LAWS AND CUSTOMS CONCERN ING: DEATH BURIAL and MOURNING One in the series of the Living Jewish Catalogue TUES.-FEB. 18 8:00 p.m at HILLEL-1429 Hill Romance Lang.: Michel BeauJour, NYU, "Rhetorique de l'auto-por- trait: Memoire artifielle et memoire naturella," W. Conf. Rm., Rack- ham, 4:15 pm. Res. College: Mary Edwards, "Con- temporary Feminist Fiction," Greene Lounge, E. Quad, 7 pm. Bio-Ethics: V. Elving Anderson, U. of Minn., "The Health Profes- sional and Human Genetics," Rack- ham Amph., 7:30 pm. Psychiatry: L. Heston, "Genetics and Schizophrenia: The Problem of Genetic Analysis," CPH Aud., 8 pm. Musical Society: Rampal, Veyron- LaCroix, flute/keyboard duo, Rack- ham Aud., 8:30 pm. Career Planning & Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7460 Summer Research Positions, $860-$960/mo for new grad. & grad. students in physical and environ- mental sciences, math, & engineer- ing with Oak Ridge National La- boratory. Deadline March 1. Write Calvin Lamb, P. 0. Box X, Office of Professional & University Relations, Oakridge, Tenn 37830. Fellowships for grad. study in Public Affairs at U. of Texas for students in any major interested in public policy study & research leading to public service career. Write Lyndon Johnson School of Public Affairs, U. of Texas, Austin, Tx 78705. MA in College Services Admin. offered by Oregon State U. Write Dr. Wm. Fielder, Sch. of Educ., Cor- vallis, Ore., 97331. Liberal Arts grad. Preparing to teach Math, Sci., English, Soc. Studies, Langs. apply to Temple U., Philadelphia, Pa. 29122. Classes begin in June. Interns begin work in city or suburban schools as full- time salaried teachers in Sept., A MA degree & certification earned. "Career Opportunities for Women in Health Sciences, Business, and Government," luncheon / discussion will be held, Conf. Rms. 1 & 2, League, Feb. 20, Noon. Studying Too Bard? Free lecture on Hypnosis Wed. at 7:30 ANN ARBOR HYPNOSIS CENTER 611 CHURCH, Suite 3029 761 -0440 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F -TONIGHT ONLY- the Indochina Peace Campaign in Ann Arbor presents Jack Nicholson ("Carnal Knowledge," "Five Easy Pieces") IN The Last Detail (1974) Raw, moving comedy-drama of two Navy "lifers" ordered to take a youna recruit to the brig, where he has been sentenced to a long term for a small infraction that embarrassed an officer. On the way, they decide to treat him to the life he will be missing behind bars, but only succeed in revealing their own desperation to each other. 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Modern Languages Bldg. Feb. THURSDAY 20 BILL GRAHAM'S historic FILLMO E (1973) The last night at the Fillmore East: Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, Santana, Quicksilver, Messenger Service, Hot Tuna, Boz Scaggs, New Riders of the Purple Sage, more MORE THAN A GREAT PERFORMANCE FILM i . _ !_ i ' i' { . I. r, JACK FOREM Author of TRANSCENDENTAL : i E 11 i tIII } } , s .I " _ : w " f a 40b.. &I LAY As ,N br 3 Ci 7!30 Fr 9!30 Nnturni Science Aud.