Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 11, 191( 231 south tate STARTS TONIGHT HELD OVER SHOWS AT ssO.s 7:00 & 9:00 Theatre Phone 4624264 OPEN At6:45L FROM GHETTO TO SUPERSTARS 111/ Artists in Leningrad took their tools and brushes to this tree creating a fearsome mon- ster whose feet are firmly planted in the ground. Foreign investment inU.S. icreases eaturing the sensational music f CURTIS M rIED- SPARKL[ . PHILIP M. THOMAS - IRENE CARA- LONETTE McKEE -DWAN SMITH MART ALICt DORIAN HAREWOOD TONY KING sUWUA 0(1)-flbM U 115 JOEL SCHUMACHER MAHl HA ROSINMAN. BERYL VIRTU P1 TR0BROWN CURTISMATOl 1111IC NCOLOR- N, oi n cur Sp e sngbe ha WO 1 av aton an ecords andTaes BONN, West Germany (AP)- Volkswagen's decision to build a plant in the United States marks a shift in world invest- ment. The days of one-way American investments in the cheap labor markets of Europe are over, German and U.S. of- ficials say. "German - American invest- ment once was a one-way street, but now it has become two-way," said a German gov- ernment spokesman. IN 1975, for the first time since World War II, West Ger- mans invested more in the United 'States than American firms invested in Germany. U.S. investment in West Ger- many for the year was $249 mil- lion, compared with the $299 million the Germans invested in the United States, the eco- nomics ministry said. One American analyst noted that U.S. investment dropped sharply in the first half of 1975 - and pointed out that talks were then under way on a law giving German workers nearly the same control of large com- panies that stockholders have. THE SO-CALLED Mitbestim- mung codetermination law was passed late last year.. A German government spokes- man said he thought the law had little to do with the decline in U.S. investment. "That was at the worst of the recession," he said. "Besides, we say to businessmen, 'Which would you rather have, strikes or Mitbestimmung and labor peace.' The Federal Republic has the lowest strike rate in the world." GERMAN AND U.S. analysts agreed that there were three basic factors which lured Ameri- can capital to Europe after the war-favorable exchange rates, low-cost labor and the develop- ment of the European Common Market. American businessmen put their own plants in Europe so they could compete if the Com- mon Market kept out U.S. im- ports. !'( P55111 tUIDANCE titFTFDl From Warner Bros. A Warner Communications Company 1 1214 °1 s. uHiversity HELD OVER! C" V S.PA 3rd Sizzling Week Shows Tonight at 7:00 & 9:00-Open at 6:45 No One Under 18 Admitted 7he masterpiece of bizarre love that stunned France. Aportraitof love and submission to disorder the senses. ." ".=y HELD OVER- 3rd Hilarious Week Shows tonight at T- 7:00 & 9:00 --Open 6:45 BILL VELCH HARVEY is Jugs" KEs "Mother""Speed" they don't call them that for nothing! ALLEN GARFIELD - L.O. JONES'- BRUCE DAVISON ",,LARRY HAGMAN JOSEPH R. BARBERA PETER YATES.-TOM MANKIEWICZ PETER YATES TOM MANKIEWICZ STEPHEN MANES.,TOMtMANKIEWICZ . "!_h 1 RA CK AA stX E ON AM cOROS ANDTAES COLON By DELUXE But the dollar, which used to buy four marks, has weakened so that it is worth only 2.5 marks. Labor costs in the Unit- ed States are the same and sometimes less than in Ger- many, financial experts say, "EXPERIENCE shows that when a European operation goes into our area the per-unit cost is 20 to 25 per cent cheaper - because of labor, raw materials, transportation, duties and espe- cially fringe benefits," said Ar. no Burckhart, who represented the Pittsburgh area here in its apparently successful campaign to get Volkswagen to put its plant in New Stanton, Pa. States and cities in Germany seek new plants and investment much the way they do in the United States, with negotiated favorable treatment on site lo- cation taxation and other rat- ters. But the German inces oives have been sufficient to ar'ract only a declining amount of r cw American investment in recent years. The economics miiistry stys U.S. investment dropyed from 1.9 billion marks in 193 to 1.3 billion marks in 1974 and 623 million marks last yar THE DAILY DIE WELT aid in an article Thursday th sire- cent unrest and political .h tt to the left in Spain Italy and Portugal were slowing dmns U.S. investment in all of Eu- rope. "That doesn't touch the Ved' eral Republic" said a om'C- ment spokesman. "Germa y 1 very stable." The economics ministry id Germans had invested 4 2 bil. lion marks in the United Sses since 1952 while Americans h:d invested 17.1 billion mars in Germany just since 1961. ATTENDANCE UP JEFFERSON C I T Y, Mao .5P) - Missouri's four Nation- al Park Service areas drew 318 million visitors in 1975, accord- ing to Merrill D. Beal, NPS Midwest Regional Director. STYLING is the name of our game. CHET, HAROLD & DAVE. U-h stylists at the UNIONj Rated X An AUietlArtlsts X21 ase I Rated X An Allied Artists ixetease I