Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 6, 1977 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 6, 1971 A Public Ser vice of this newspaper & The Advertising CouncilA Today is the first day of the rest of your life. so itcan be thefirst day of somebody else's, too. Red Cross. The Good Neighbor. ~)PEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTtL 9 00 4 - t like this bold. bright rugby-stripedr polyester/cotton knitf you can halter tie to a comfortable, flattering fit .by Dippers in- s red, brown, green} or yellow with light contrasting stripes, 5-13 sizes. $15 FROM OUR 4V;44 tJA-" 4 Jaeob4or FIE-E FREE PARKING IN THE ADJACENT RAMP - WE WILL VALIDATE YOUR TICKET French find new method of enriching nuclear fuel PARIS (P) - France an- nouneed yesterday it has de- vised a new way to enrich uran- ium for power plants that elimi- nates the risk that the material could be used for nuclear wea- pons. The disclosure may remove a potential source of conflict be- tween President Carter and some U. S. allies at the London summit this weekend.. If such a process proves prac- tical, it could help prevent the proliferation of atomic arms to non-nuclear nations, a concern frequently stressed by Carter. ANDRE GIRAUD, general ad- ministrator of the French Atom- ic Energy Agency, announced the development of the new technique at a meeting of the French Council for External Nuclear Policy. He said it has "the advantage of permitting production of slightly enriched uranium suit- able for supplying nuclear gen- erators, without being able to be used in practice as the highly enriched uranium employed for weapons." Giraud gave no details of the process, and a spokesman for the agency refused to elaborate. The spokesman said Giraud planned a news conference Fri- day at an atomic energy confer- ence in Salzburg, Austria, where he would explain "the condi- tions through which the process could be the basis for interna- tional cooperation." Philip Keith, a spokesman for the U. S. delegation at the Salz- burg conference, said the dele- gation did not yet know the de- tails of the French process, but "we are, of course, very inter- ested in this and happy about everything that helps nonprolif- eration." The U. S. government has op- posed the export of nucleas technology to non-nuclear states when the equipment sold would facilitate the production of atomic arms. TIE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 3-S Friday, May, 197 Is edited and managed by studenb at the University of Michigan. New phone 74-0502. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mleicgass 419. Published d aII y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 4109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. usscrption rates: $0.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 Wy mail outside Ann Arbor. UNIVERSITY OF PARIS-SORBONNE SUNY/NEW PALTZ PROGRAM 7TH YEAR Undergraduates in philoso- ohy and related moaiors earn 30-32 c r e d i t s in regular Sorbonne (Paris IV) courses. SUNY-Paris IV ooreement insures students avoid cum- bers9ne pre-inscription and attend Paris IV, not proin- cial universities. Director assists w i t h housing, pro- grams, studies. Orientation, lanquage review. Sept. 15- June 15. Estimlted living, airfare, tuition,.ees: $3400 N.Y. r es id en ts; $3900 o t h e r s. Prof. P. Chorlson, Philosophy Dept., S. U. C. New Poltz, New York 12561. (914) 257-2696