ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, January 4, 1996              TAG: 9601040063
SECTION: BUSINESS                 PAGE: B8   EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: DETROIT  
SOURCE: Associated Press 


AUTOMAKERS STRUTTING THEIR STUFF

General Motors rolled out four new sedans aimed at the fat middle segment of the U.S. car market. Ford showed off the replacement for its best-selling small car and Chrysler announced it would build a high-tech hot rod.

That was a taste of Wednesday's action at a press preview for the North American International Auto Show, which draws the world's automakers to the Motor City for a frenzied few days of hoopla.

GM, the largest carmaker, probably packed the largest announcements into a single event, showing four new cars that will compete in the midsize sedan segment for its Chevrolet, Pontiac, Buick and Oldsmobile divisions. Midsize cars comprise more than a quarter of the U.S. market, and GM controls about a third of that.

Its new Chevy Malibu, Pontiac Grand Prix, Buick Century and Oldsmobile Intrigue will reach showrooms over the next couple of years, replacing cars that have been criticized for competing with each other.

GM's top marketing executive, Vice President Ronald Zarrella, said the new models demonstrate that the company has overcome that kind of uncomfortable overlap. The Chevy is squarely aimed at people shopping for a low price. The Pontiac targets performance enthusiasts.

The Olds is for upscale buyers who might normally shop for import sport sedans and the Buick will appeal to older buyers who want ``premium'' cars with conservative styling and room for six riders.

``We'll have fewer entries in the midsize market and they'll be farther apart,'' GM Chairman Jack Smith said later Wednesday. ``It's the end of the look-alikes.''

Smith also said the company would use the ``value pricing'' approach for all four, setting manufacturer suggested prices at levels which discourage haggling.

``Our model here is Saturn,'' Smith said. ``People like that system ... to take the fear out of the purchase environment.''

Among other auto show highlights:

The No. 2 automaker, Ford, introduced its 1997 Escort, a replacement for the economy car that battles with Honda Civic and Saturn for the title of best-selling compact. Although the new Escort is not a complete redesign, it is larger and has new looks inside and out.

GM's Cadillac division showed off the Catera, a German-built car it will sell as the entry-level Cadillac starting this fall. Based on GM's Opel Omega, the Catera hopes to compete with European and Japanese luxury brands in this country.

Acura, Honda's luxury division, introduced the new American-made sport coupe it hopes to sell to affluent baby boomers. The Acura CL will go on sale in March, built at Honda's plant in East Liberty, Ohio. The first U.S.-built Acura, the CL will be priced between $22,000 and $27,000.

Germany's BMW showed off the Z3 roadster that is a co-star in the latest James Bond movie and previewed its 1997 540i model.

Chrysler took the wraps off its retro hot rod, the Plymouth Prowler, which will go into production next year at a plant in Detroit.

Ford's Aston Martin Lagonda showed the $135,000 Aston Martin DB7 Volante, which will return the British performance luxury car maker to the U.S. market. The company expects to sell about 200 a year here starting this summer.

The auto show opens to the public on Saturday.


LENGTH: Medium:   68 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  General Motors displayed its new midsize inventory 

Wednesday at Detroit's North American International Auto Show.

AP

by CNB