T'uesda'y, October 31, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Tuesday, October 31, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine t l TR E TMRU T4E FOJTI1K COMMISSIONER . Student .*Democrat * McGovern Delegate "Vote for Kathy," elected in an open primary by the people of District 14." Nov.7-For the people, not the party paid political advertisement DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN McCracken, Ackley debate fiscal policy The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m, of Sthe day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 DAY CALENDAR. Music School: Trumpet Student Re- cital, SM Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. Biophysics Seminar: B. Rubin, "Small-Angle X-ray Studies of Colla- gen." 618 Physics-Astronomy Bldg., 1 pm. ",I Stony Brook, "Gauge Theories of Weak Interaction," 2038 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Prog. in Engineering for Public Sys- tems: E. Savas, first deputy city admin. of N.Y. City. "On the Design of Counter-Productive Public Systems." 311 W. Engin., 4 pm. Prog. in Studies in Religion, Relig. Affairs, Sociology, Art Hist. & Near East. Langs. & Lits: T. Kachel, D. Freedman, K. Stendahl, dean, Harvard Divinity School, T. Gill. John Jay Col- lege. R. Bellah, Univ. of Cal,, Berkeley; panel on "Religion & the American Academic Scene," 4 pm. K. Stendahl, dean, Harvard'Divinity Sch., "The Fu- ture Role of Universities in the Educa- tion of Religious Ministers," 8 pm.; both held in Mod. Langs. Bldg. Residential Coll. Renaissance Drama- Films: "Berenice." French, no sub- titles, Res. Coll. Aud., 7 pm. Computing Center: L. Flanigan & J. Henriksen, "GPSS/360: Part I," Semi- nar Rm., Comp. Ctr., 7:30 pm. Music School: Symphony Orchestra, T. Alcantara, conductor, Hill Aud., 8 prResidential .Call, Astronomical Film Festival: "Man in Space" "The Legacy of Gemini" and "The Active Sun," RC Aud.. 9 pm. 1 r. Mar Michigan's Most Complete Hi-Fi & Electronics Centers -1% GSA Coffee Hour: Program in Re- ligious Studies, 2549 LSA Bldg., 3 pm. Library Film Series: "Faulkner's Mis- sissippi," commentary by Lyall H. Powers, UGLI Multi-purpose Rm., 3:34 pm. Physics Energy Seminar: Jackson, Ford Scientific Labs, "Composite Exci- tations in Superfluid Helium," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. Physics Seminar: B. W. Lee, SUNY, By ANGELA BALK Prof. Paul McCracken concen- troted on Nixonomics and Prof. H. Gardner Ackley focused on Mc- Govern's fiscal proposal as the two economists debated national financial policy in a guest lecture yesterday in Economics 201. Both Ackley and McCracken have been members and chair- men of the President's Council of Economic Advisers: Ackley un- der Presidents Kennedy and John- son (1962-1968) and McCracken under Presidents Eisenhower and Nixon (1956-1959 and 1969-1971). Their partisan ties showed up consistently throughout the de- bate. There was "an unusually com- plex conjunction of problems" when Nixon took office, according to McCracken. The nation was at the "peak" of defense spending, in the midst of a "long and difficult" inflation, and had lost its interna- tional trade advantage, he said. Under the Nixon administra- tion, McCracken asserted, the economy has gone from "exces- sive expansion to excessive re- straint" in order to solve the problems it faced. Ackley criticized the economic policy of the Nixon government, saying that while "inflation is now fading" the wage-price freeze was a "drastic and dangerous" meth- od of attacking it. The freeze would not have been necessary, ac- cording to Ackley, if Nixon had not rejected milder forms of inter- ference in the economy. If McGov- ern is elected, said Ackley, the wage-price freeze will be "sup- planted promptly. by voluntary guidelines" for' keeping wages and prices at non-inflationary levels, Voluntary guidelines, contended McCracken, had been tried by the ,Johnson administration and had failed. "The Nixon administration did not kill the guidelines. They were dead when we arrived," he said. McGovern, according to Ackley, is more concerned with the goal of full employment than is. Nix- on. McGovern, said Ackley, would not only encourage employment but would also establish a pro- gram of "residual public service jobs" so that "every willing work- er" will have a job. McCracken agreed that "the ac- ceptable rate of unemployment is zero percent." He added, however, that inflation had to be dealt with and it could not have been solved without a rise in unemployment. This rise, according to McCracken, was "not great, only one and a half per cent." The wage-prize freeze, McCrack- en said, has bought the consumer price performance from "the worst in the world to the best," allow- ed average spendable weekly earn- ings to "rise four and a half per cent per year," and prepared the nation for a "vigorous and long- sustained economic expansion." "Our economy will survive even another four years of Ribhard Nixon," stated Ackley, but it will be "more prosperous" under Mc- Govern. 0 TH El mI LL L J I D S LE I HURRY-SALE ENDS SATURDAY, NOV. 4 NO LAYAWAYS! NO RAINCHECKS! NO DEALERS! 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