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December 02, 1975 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-12-02

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

Tuesday, December 2, 1975 I-LML-INDIYPg he

Common Marke
ROME (A') -- Common Market tic." But, he said, "peaceful
leaders opened a two-day sum- rivalry" is indispensible.
mit meeting yesterday in a ma- The leaders of Britain,
jor test of their will to over- IFrance, West Germany, Italy,
come nationalistic and eco- Ireland, Luxembourg, Belgium,
nomic differences and unify 250 The Netherlands and Denmark
million Europeans. met under tight security in the
Britain's insistence of break- 17th century Barberini Palace,
ing ranks and having its own a baroque masterpiece designed
seat at energy and economic by Bernini.
talks scheduled to begin Dec. As they drove up in a motor.-
16 in Paris, the election of a cade, about 100 demonstrators
Europewide parliament and held up placards demanding
plans for a Common Marrket European elections across na-
passport topped an informal tional boundaries by 1978 and
agenda of the nine leaders. free elections in Spain. Hun-:
dreds of police and soldiers
SETTING A TONE for the fanned out in nearby streets
summit, French President and no incidents were reported.:
Valery Giscard d'Estaing de-
dlared in a preconference BRITISH PRIME MINISTERS
speech that the "European com- Harold Wilson's demand to go
munity we are building has hap- it alone in economic policy, I
pily made military rivalry driving a wedge through the
among its states anachronis- solidarity of the economic com-
ISTEVE'S LUNCH I
1313 50. UNIVERSITY
I ~ HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY I

t begins summit\
munity, figured to dominate the iThere is also general agreement
opening day talks. on a passport, but the summit
With Britain hopeful of be- must resolve differences over
coming a major European en.. who the issuing authority
ergy exporter in the 1980s as should be -- the Common Mar-
the result of North Sea oil finds, ket or the individual countries
Wilson has demanded a sepa- -and what language the pass-
rate seat at the Paris talks of port should be in.

VEGETARIANS

UNIT E!
JOIN THE
MOVE FOR A

27/ rich and poor nations. The
other eight want the Common
Market to speak with one voice,
and Italian sources said Wil-
son's stand could force post-
ponement of the conference.
On direct elections, there was
a presummit consensus that
they be held in 1978, giving the
community a parliament of the
United States of Europe. Brit-
ain, however, views the date
as unrealistic and says national
electorates and parliaments
need more time to consider it.

Some spiders have c'hanged
little since carboniferous times,
The 1976 U. S. Open golf
championship will be played in
Atlanta.
Air Force Academy tailback
Ken Wood scored nine touch-
downs for the 1974 Falcons.

CO-OPERATIVE
VEGETA RIAN H OUSE
for FALL '76

CRUCIAL MEETING
Tuesday, December 2-7:30 p.m.
INT ER-COOPERAT IVE COUNCIL
OFFICE, RM. 4002
MICH. UNION
or
cal s t 62.4414

I

Desperadoes
awell as the
good guys
ply Billiard
at the U NION

AP Photo
Old time schooling
Fourth graders in Racine, Wisconsin sketch a local one room
schoolhouse, while looking back at the days of reading, writ-
ing and 'rithmetic.
NOT T HE ST AT E'S PUPP E T
Beame claims he's
still at helm in NYC

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ADVERTIlNG
MICHIGAN

(A') - New York Mayor Ab-'
raham Beame denied yesterday
that new state controls over
budget decisions in his financ-
ially shaky city had taken oper-
ation of the city out of his
hands.
"The mayor of New York is:
still the manager of the city,"
he told newsmen at the annual
meeting of the National League
of Cities here. "He ,still runs
the city, and determines priori-.
ties. He hires and fires, and
develops programs." I
IN RETURN for state aid
to help avert a New York City
default, a board composed of'
state officials, city officials in-
cluding Beame, and private
businessmen, has been given
authority over spending levels
and borrowing policy in the
city.
The feeling of some otherj

mayors was most succinctly
put by League President Car-
los Barcelo, Republican mayor
of San Juan. "Mayor Beame
no longer runs New York, and
no other city wants to be in
that situation," Romero said.
Beame asserted, however,
that the board "does not deter-
mine priorities. They don't have
any input in telling me how
money is to be spent."
IN INTERVIEWS at the con-
ference, more than a dozen
-mayors of both parties have
said they doubted other cities
would seek the same kind of
federal aid which President
Ford has proposed for New
York. One reason nearly all of
them mentioned was the loss of:
local control which New York
has suffered over its budget. I
Beame said he thought the
city would avert a default,
which looms on Dec. 11, if the
Congress approves President
Ford's plan for federal loans
to the city of no more than
$2.3 billion in each of three
years.
The mayor said Ford's de-
cision to propose the aid last
week "had a tinge of politics to:
it although it was very wel-
come considering his other ac-
tions."

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y"I'd like to eliminatetthe cn
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T H E CONSUMPTION of
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"The school stores are in
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Mary Sesma, a physiology
teacher, put it more succinctly:
"This is not a Fascist state.
People are going to eat as they
choose."
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I U III~-1~UhIIIIL

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