aily-Wednesday, July 16, 1980-Page 9 Detroit papers publish under dual mast heads DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroit News and rival Detroit Free Press, attempt- ing to thwart a strike by Free Press drivers and delivery employees, published a joint edition yesterday and vowed a substantial circulation drive. The Free Press also agreed to a federal mediator's call for a meeting today with striking members of Team- sters Local 372, who walked off the job Saturday, said William Lowers, the newspaper's labor relations chief. "IT'S A SESSION to bring the parties together," Lowers said, adding that although bargaining was not scheduled, it was not ruled out. The two dailies published a single, morning edition under one masthead, consisting of 92 News pages and a 24- page Free Press section. The News, which publishes a limited morning edition in addition to its regular afternoon editions, ran its nor- mal press run plus 150,000, officials said. THE UNUSUAL move was an effort to salvage Free Press coverage of the Republican National Convention, disrupted when 523 members of the Newspaper Guild, which represents editorial, advertising and clerical em- ployees, refused to cross picket lines. Thee newspapers normally have an agreement to shut down together if one is closed by a strike. Free Press Executive Editor David Lawrence Jr. said the convention was being handled by the paper's conven- tion editor and reporters and editors from -other newspapers in the Knight- Ridder group, of which the Free Press is a member. About 15 newsroom department heads were staffing the remainder of city and state coverage, Lawrence said. PRINTERS AT THE Detroit News in Sterling Heights, Michigan check the ink at the start of the press run early yester- day of a 92-page integrated edition which also carries the masthead of the Detroit Free Press. It includes three sections written by News reporters and one 24-page Free Press section. Chrysler to seek another loan WASHINGTON (UPI) - The finan- cially troubled Chrysler Corp. announ- ced yesterday it is seeking another $300 million in federal loan guarantees to stave off bankruptcy and finance production of its new "K" car. The company arranged to make the request at a late-afternoon closed meeting of the Chrysler Loan Guaran- tee Board, a special government panel headed by Treasury Secretary G. William Miller. EARLIER THIS year, Congress ap- proved up to $1.5 billion in loan guaran- tees to the nation's third-largest auto manufacturer, and created the loan board to authorize the relief when it was needed. 1 On June 24, the loan board gave Chrysler the green light to issue $500 million in 10-year notes at a handsome yield of 40.35 per cent. In virtually no time, the automaker had lined up buyers for all the notes, which carry the federal government's guarantee they will be paid off no matter what happens to Chrysler. The guarantees are being issued in stages, with each step requiring the ap- proval of the loan's board's three voting members: Miller, Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and -Com- ptroller of the Currency Elmer Staats. Company officials declined comment yesterday on a New York Times report that the company sustained losses of between $900 million and $1 billion during the first six months of this year. One Detroit-based auto analyst told the newspaper Chrysler's losses during the April-to-June quarter of this year represented the largest quarterly loss by a major company in U.S. history. The loan guarantee program is the largest and most complicated federal effort ever undertaken to assist a private firm on the verge of bankrup- tcy. Platinum does not produce dust during heating and cooling, so it is used to plate furnaces that produce fine op- tical glass. Cardinal Dearden, area Catholic leader, resigns jFunniest, CARNEY::,. < : bLODes5t ACeetIpndr 71-70 b.'s>.:Locke - ands Thurs, Fri-7:20 9:30 ARTZ INDIVIDUA L THEATRES CARNEY 5t Ave. at i bery 761-9700 >? BLONDIE T *They do mTe;ALICE COOPER it ALONE! :: * JODIE FOSTER GO, MEATLOAF DETROIT (UPI)-Cardinal John Dearden, head of Detroit's archdiocese during 22 tumultuous years for both church and city, resigned yesterday ash spiritual leader of the area's 1.2 million Catholics, citing poor health. Church leaders, although saddened, praised the 72-year-old archbishop's "noble" decision as a means of en- suring continued strong leadership in the nation's seventh-largest diocese. THE SEARCH FOR a successor to Dearden, who helped elect two popes, was to begin immediately, church of- ficials said. Dearden, first president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and recognized as a top leader of the American church, said he felt frustrated at his inability to conduct church affairs vigorously since suf- fering a heart attack in April 1977. Dearden, named archbishop of Detroit by Pope John XXIII in 1958 and elevated to cardinal in 1969 by Pope Paul VI, declined speculation on who would succeed him, saying the selection process would take at least six months. D E WED. $1.50 ti15:00 B Er , 8:20 WED-2:50,6:30, 10:10 R -8:20 THURS, FRI-6:30, 10:10