D will ligh the emi yest A syst rele conr D aut ecoi The Michigan Daily--Friday, August 4, 1978-Page 13 Ford must recall 1,475,000 ears ETROIT (AP) - Ford Motor Co. year. Ford has sold about 2,270,000 cars Kogyo Co. Ltd. vehicle's fuel evaporative emission recall the first 1,475,000 cars and in the United States this model year. Ford estimated that only 200,000 of control system. t trucks it built in North America in Trucks and Canadian sales are not in- the nearly 1.5 million cars would have The valve normally ensures a closed 1978 model year to correct an cluded in that figure. the problem. But the company was system to eliminate evaporative ssions defect, the company said COMPANY spokesman Chuck unable to pinpoint which assembly emissions. If it is not connected terday. Cumushian said the problem was first plants installed the defective valves properly, gasoline fumes containing valve in the emissions control noticed by the California Air Resources and decided to recall all the models, hydrocarbons are released to the air. tem might become disengaged and Board last November. Ford in- Gumushian said. Gumushian said the fumes would ase gasoline fumes into the air, the vestigated and made assembly line IN A PREPARED statement, Jensen escape into the engine compartment spany said, changes in mid-February, he said. said that on some models a "purge but that there would be no dangerous ONALD A. JENSEN, director of The spokesman said it was a volun- valve may become disconnected buildup. He said the leakage would be omotive emissions and fuel tary recall but that Ford had notified because of insufficient engagement to tee small to be detectable in the nom confirmed a report by the the U.S. Environmental Protection the carbon canister which is part of the passenger compartment. i i r i 4 4 i Mutuy, ;ii .c iV V . . bimonthly trade publication, Ward's Engine Update. He said owners would be notified of the recall later this mon- th. Ford said it will notify owners by mail to take their cars to a dealer for inspection and correction, if necessary. The recalled autos constitute about half of Ford's output for the \model Agency of its plans. Gumushian said the recall covers all 1978-model, domestically built cars and light trucks built before the February change was made. NOT INCLUDED are Ford of Europe's German-built Fiesta and Mercury Capri cars and its Courier light truck, made in Japan by Toyo Terrorists killVPLO Paris representative sa cc H a: L C w S re to w y. Cuban says Oswald never asked for visa HAVANA (AP) - A Cuban diplomat out in Oswald's name. Azque, testifying ays the man who applied at Cuba's before an international tribunal here on onsulate in Mexico City for a visa to "imperialist crime," claimed the visa avana shortly before the applicant who identified himself as ssassination of John Kennedy was not Oswald was not the same man who ee Harvey Oswald, as the Warren killed Kennedy in Dallas eight weeks ommission concluded, later. The diplomat, Eusebio Asque Lopez, Although the photograph appearing as Cuba's consul in Mexico City in in the upper left hand corner of the copy eptember 1963 when, according to the of the visa is clearly that of Oswald, Varren Report, Oswald got into a Azque said the man who actually made eated discussion with Azque at the the application was at least 10 years onsulate there because the Cubans older than Kennedy's assassin. efused to give him permission to travel As to why the Cuban government did Cuba. not make the claim until now, one of- ficial said that Cuba wanted to wait un- THE CUBAN government released til the World Festival of Youth and hat it said was a photostatic copy Students, with 145 nations represented, esterday of a visa application filled now under way here. (Continued from Page 1) At one point, a man appeared bran- dishing a pistol and seemingly holding a hostage. Shortly afterward, a man, his hands roughly bound together, was shown at the window to indicate to police the terrorist had been seized. When taken to a police van, his face was streaming with blood. The suspect had been overpowered by security men of the Arab League, which shares its offices in the building with the PLO. Later an anonymous caller to the French news agency Agence France- Prpsse claimed the attack was carried out by a previously unknown "Rejec- tion Front of Stateless Arab Palestinians." THE CALLER also claimed the group was responsible for a terrorist at- tack Monday on the Iraqi Embassy in Paris. That raid ended in a shootout between French police and Iraqi Em- bassy security guards who tried to kill the terrorist when he surrendered. One policeman and one Iraqi guard were killed, and the terrorist and three other persons were wounded. It seemed unlikely, however, that the same organization would carry out both raids, since the targets were on op- posite sides of the intra-Arab conflict. The militantly anti-Israel gover- nment of Iraq believes only war can resolve the Arab-Israeli dispute, insists on total dismantling of the Jewish state and supports Palestinian extremists trying to topple Arafat because of his comparative flexibility. Arafat is willing to accept co-existence with Israel if negotiations yield a PLO- governed state in the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip. GUERRILLA sources in Beirut had said the two men who attacked the Iraqi Embassy - one escaped - were mem- bers of Arafat's Fatah guerrilla organization, the largest and strongest PLO group. That raised speculation that the assassination of Qalaq, a moderate who followed the Arafat line, was a reprisal raid by Palestinians backed by the Iraqi regime. Qalaq, a French-educated chemical engineer, had been the PLO spokesman in Paris since the bombing assassination of his predecessor, Mah- moud Hamchari, in 1973. Israeli secret agents were alleged to have carried out that killing. IN AN INTERVIEW earlier this year, Qalaq said his office had "lost count of the number of death threats by telephone and letter, and the letter bombs addressed to us." "What does one life count," he said, "compared to the struggle of our people." "If I fall,:other will replace me," he said. OBSERVERS HAD predicted Qalaq would play an important role if an in- dependent Palestinian state was established. Arafat's chief spokesperson in Lon- don, said Hammami, was assassinated in his office last January, and the PLO representative in Kuwait, Ali Yassin, was murdered in June. The Fatah group blamed both deaths on Iraqi- backed Palestinian radicals. Besides the raid on the Iraqi Em- bassy here Monday, there have been three other anti-Iraqi attacks on foreign soil in the past week - unsuccessful at- tempts to kill Iraqi diplomats in Lon- don, Beirut and Karachi, Pakistan. pingwater Depot Catherine at Fifth St. at the Farmers Market Green 0Oak 100% AAran Woer 995-3100 Israel raids Lebanon after guerrilla attack 13 BEIRUT Mls L EbNON Isreliidon IetaIIate i Daher a-Tutah Medterroneen So# Tyre Goan~ Helghti ISRAEL terrorist Ieu0 u (Continued from Page 1) the market bombing as "a savage and brutal act.., that nothing can justify. If the Palestine Liberation Organization claims credit, then our condemnation applies to it." CARTER DECLINED to comment on the Israeli air attack. Washington has criticized Israel for past retaliatory strikes across Arab borders. The Tel Aviv bomb was hidden in a black briefcase planted under a stall selling T-shirts and children's clothes in the Carmel market, a maze-like collec- tion. of open-air shops. The market usually is crowded on Thursdays by shoppers preparing for the Jewish sab- bath, which starts at sundown today. Hours after the blast, Ichilov Hospital said one of the victims, a 71-year-old man, had died of injuries suffered in the explosion. "I WENT OVER to the stall and sud- denly I felt my legs were cut in half," said Suzanne Eluh, one of those injured in the blast. "My daughter started screaming and had blood all over her face," said Mrs. Eluh, 42, from the nor- thern port city of Haifa. Vita Meshulam, the owner of the stall where the blast occurred, said he had briefly noticed the black case under his A O/lIA~A, I Bell's Pizza- has fast, free delivery. Open From 11:00 a.m. FREE DELIVERY From 4:30 p. m. S. State & Packard 995-0232 ~1 w . . ...... .. r . , , .. . . . ,. _. .. _ ..