Tuesday, September 25, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 'Nixon asks for lift f gas price ceiling AP Photo TALKING PEACE in his address to the UN General Assembly yesterday, Henry Kissinger made his first major appearance since becoming secretary of state last Saturday. He urged the nations to join the U.S. goal of "world community." "U.S. does not seek dominance of world affairs," Kissger assures WASHINGTON 03) - President Nixon ordered the Cost of Living Council yesterday to clear the way this week for an increase in retail gasoline prices. The President acted as spokes- men for gasoline retailers said scattered service station shut- downs may spread unless dealers get immediate relief from Phase 4 price controls. THE COST OF LIVING Coun- cil and its director, John Dunlop, have been following a timetable which would ha've allowed the at- the-pump. price increase to go into effect Oct. 2. But White House spokesmen Gerald Warren said the Presi- dent "asked Dr. Dunlop to ex- pedite this matter . . . and get the decision out this week." Dunlop responded that he would, Warren added. TlE PRESIDENTIAL spokes- man would not discuss how large the increase would be, but indi- cations are that the council will allow a hike of one or two cents per gallon. Service station operators who are staging the shutdowns con- tend they are unfairly squeezed by Phase 4 regulations.. Their ceiling prices are com- puted under a complex formula which has forced them to absorb increases in the wholesale price of gasoline. THE COUNCIL, moving to al- low a pass-through of, higher wholesale costs, asked service operators on Sept. 14 to submit data on their costs and profits by today. Dunlop said Oct. .2 had been targeted as, the effective date for a retail price increase. But, according to Warren, Nixon relayed word through aides that he wanted the timetable speeded up in an effort to "clear up whatever confusion remains in the price of gasoline." Warren skirted a question on whether Nixon wanted the serv- ice stations to stay open. "The President would not attempt to counsel dealers on how to oper- ate their individual stations," he said. MEANWHILE, Warren said Nixon is reviewing recommenda- tions that he order a mandatory allocation system for fuel this winter, but added, "No decision has been made." There have been scattered closings by independent gasoline dealers to protest Phase 4 regu- lations on gasoline. LSA COFFEE HOUR TUESDAY 3:00-4:30 Sept. 25 for Anthropology Dept. Angell Hall Basement' I I THOUSANDS OF gas stations H utvv nr uue n cr s 4..r . r :4as By AP and Reuter UNITED NATIONS Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger as- sured the nations of 'the world yesterday that the United States will not seek to dominate their affairs in concert with the So- viet Union or any other big pow- er. "My country remains com- mitted to the goal of a world community," Kissinger promised. the UN General Assembly .in his debut as secretary. - SPEAKING TO an attentive audience fo foreign ministers and their deputies, " Kissinger also proposed that the 135-member nations agree on peacekeeping ,guidelines for swift and effective action in future crises. In his ;3,000-word address, the Secretary of State, who received an ovation from his capacity au- dience, said "The vocabulary of suspicion" persisted, even in the UN, despite the end of many of' the Cold War confrontations. He urged the assembly "to move with us from detente to co- operation, from co-existence to community." The U.S., he said, would spare no effort .to ease tensions further and to move to- wards greater stability. IN HIS SPEECH, Kissinger said the peacekeeping guidelines are necessary because in recent years "we found ourselves locked in fruitless debates about the in- auguration of peacekeeping op- erations and over the degree of control the Security Council would exercise over peacekeep- ing machinery, an impasse which insured only that perma- nent peacekeeping machinery would never come into being." Kissinger said that even though the United States has broken through two decades of estrange- ment with Communist China and ended many cold war confronta- tions with the Soviet Union, "even in this room the vocabulary of suspicion persists." "Relaxation of tensions is jus- tified by some as merely a tac- tical interlude before renewed struggle," Kissinger said. "Oth- ers suspect the emergence of a two-power condominium."' HE SAID THE truth is that the United States has no desire for domination and will oppose any. nation that chooses that path. "We have not been asked to _par- ticipate in a condominium; we would reject such an appeal if it were made,".he promised. Kissinger also proposed that the United Nations organize a world food conference next year "to harness the efforts of all na- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 17 Tuesday, September 25, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan* 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carriera(cam- pus area); $11 local mall (Michigan and Ohio); $12. non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summnersession published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail ,(other states and foreign). tions to meet. the hunger -and malnutrition resulting from na- tural disasters." And he renewed the U. S. pledge of support for permanent membership in the Security Council for Japan. The five per- manent members of the 15-na- tion council since the UN was formed in 1945 have been the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China. KISSINGER'S SPEECH to the 28th General Assembly contained no hold U. S. initiative for break- ing the impasse in the Middle East, nor any other dramatic, far-reaching proposal. Its significance rested more in its tone, particularly in reas- surances that "the- United States will never be satisfied with a world of uneasy truces, of off- setting blocks, of accommoda- tions of convenience." Kissinger plans to spend three days in New York. While there he will meet with Foreign Minis- ters Andrei Gromyko of the So- viet Union, Sir Alec-Douglas Home of Britain, Massayoshi Ohira of Japan and others or1 such matters as the prospects of maintaining momentum toward detente with Moscow and the possibility of President Nixon's visiting Europe and Japan by the end of the year. KISSINGER IS LIKELY to visit Western Europe for talks on strengthening the Atlantic Part- nership if President Nixon can- cels his own plans for a grand tour 'of European capitals. nave been closed for the past three days in California and about 75 per cent of the stations everyone w in Indianapolis closed yesterday. Some stations also closed in the Washington, D.C., area, but most stations were open. velcome NEW WORLD FILM COOP --presents- JULES FEIFFEB'S liii PIIIIiI iliii BEER, WINE, & PIZZA NIGHT We call it QUARTER NIGHT OPEN 4:00-2:00 PLUS DISCOUNT PRICES ON LIQUOR A Moving Experience ii Sound & Light 341 S. 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