page three Sdn ai1 FAIR High-85 Low - 55 Hot, muggy, nasty Ab -7AA t *Wednesday, August 18, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan News none: tbL-U L Workers warned against strikes in freeze period By The Associated Press The Nixon administration asked all striking workers yesterday to go back to work during the 90-day wage-price freeze, and asked organized labor not to start any new strikes during the period. 4 Leaders of several unions strongly objected to Nixon's wage and prize freeze, saying it favors business over the workers. The chief federal labor mediator, J. Curtis Counts, an- nounced the policy, saying that, "I am requesting that the labor and management leaderships cooperate by termina- ,tion stoppages and returning to the begaining table during the period of the wage-price freezes." Meanwhile, the Commerce Department said yesterday the balance-of-payments deficit dropped to an all-time low in the second quarter of the year. Production in the nation's factories fell more sharply in July than in any other month since last November. Steel manufacturers postponed price increases on steel products, and both General Motors, Co. and Ford Motor Co. announced they would offer 1972 cars at 1971 prices. Rent increases were stopped and prices of utilities were fixed as well. Although federal officials have encouraged labor and 4 management to continue negotiations on money issues which could become effective after the freeze, some nego- tiators called off talks or put them into low gear. "How can you negotiate a wage increase when you can't negotiate a wage increase," said Jack Hogan, vice president of a longshoreman's local in San Francisco. Spokesmen on both sides of the contract talks said the , President's actions would slow down efforts to settle the seven-week longshoreman's strike tying up West Coast ports. The price freeze has done little to calm many labor leaders who felt Nixon's action hit the working man hard- est. AFL-CIO president George Meany said the p 1 a n fav- ors industry and is "patently discriminatory as far as American workers are concerned." Leonard Sprague, business manager for Local 222 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers in Massachusetts, warned: "If the freeze means we are not going to get a wage increase until the end of the 90-days, then we're going to Praise hell." And in Minnesota, Myra Wolfgang, international vice president of the Hotel and Restaurant Workers Union, said her members would ignore the President's Freeze. See LABOR, Page 6 PRESIDENT NIXON CHATS with Terence Cardinal Cooke in New York last night before address- ing a meeting of the Knights of Columbus at the Waldorf Astoria hotel. The President appealed for public support for his new economic policies, presenting them as the road to rebirth of the American heritage of hard work and success. "It's easy to sit back and criticize," Nixon said. "It's hard to make the sacrifices, do the work, make the extra effort that makes the difference between a nation on the' way down and a nation on the way up," OEP: Swamped after Nixon freeze decision WASHINGTON ( 0- O n specifics of the most personal economic question of the day - how does President Nixon's wage-price-rent freeze affect me and my business - the gov- ernment is totally confused, "I'm sure there have been a lot of incorrect answers given out," says a spokesman for the Office of Emergency Prepared- ness, which is charged w it h giving out the answers. In fact, the OEP has q u it responding to specific que s- tions, "Obvious answers should be given," says the OEP spokes- man, Dave Pattison, "but we've gotten far beyond that." Reporters tapping knowledge- able sources, have gotten con- flicting information. The Trea- sury Department will answer a question one way. The Depart- Dollar stays afloat in European money pool; trade war threatens, ment of Housing and Urban Development will answer it the opposite way. "We are trying to develop guidelines," Pattison said. "We won't have anything in g r e a t detail until the end of t h e week. We are trying to inter- pret the questions implicit in the President's executive order. We cannot give specific an- swers to specific questions until the policy council decides." Nixon set down the basic rules for freezing prices, wages and rents of America's 207,830,f696 people with 161 words and a stroke of his pen. He also es- tablished a Cost of Living Coun- cil composed of- top department heads who don't get on the phone to answer the lady in Os- awatomie, Kan. That chore, the President de- legated to OEP, a friendly little agency that in the givernment colossus of 2.8 million em- ployes ranks as an earwig to a hippopotamus. Its 402 employes in Washington and across the country put OEP on a par with the American Battle Monu- ments Commission which h as two fewer, This, then, is the agency struggling to answer questions such as the one from a soft- drink bottler who had a sale in July's heat and wants to know whether he can go back up to a dime a bottle. Or, whether the future cost of living increases built into wage contracts or provided by management a r e exempt. On that one,wthe answerpis no. Or, how do you price new products? You charge w h a t your competitor charges. Or, how does one apply for relief. Guidelines, soon. The OEP is used to helping hurricane victims or plotting how to get government togeth- er after some other country blows away two, four, or a doz- en cities with nuclear bombs. But in the area of President Nixon's wage-price-rent freeze, the OEP would be better nam- ed the Office of Emergency Unpreparedness. "There are a hundred thous- and gray areas," says Pattison who handles congressional and public affairs for OEP. "We are obviously not all lawyers." The agency has eight re- gional offices in such places as Maynard, Mass., Olney, Md., Denton, Tex. and Bothell, Wash. It is now working w i t h the General Services Adminis- tration to put in offices in Bos- ton, New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago, Kansas City, Denver, Dallas, San Francisco and Seattle. Meanwhile the Cost of Liv- ing Council is meeting to stamp out guidelines, which are to be passed to the OEP's command center for distribution. People lucky enough to get in on one of the 20 lines might get answers if they're lucky enough to have a prob- lem that's been resolved Most calls so far, says time OEP, have been from trade as- sociations, the press, congress- men, labor and business repre- sentatives. The number, in case anyone cares to try, is 202-395581. And good luck. Congressional leaders assure, Nixon on plan WASHINGTON W) - Presi- dent Nixon got assurances yes- terday from congressional lead- ers that they will move swiftly to consider his proposals to curb inflation and stimulate the economy, the White House reported. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, reporting to newsmen on a two hour and 15 minute meeting between the President and k-y congressional members of both parties, described i t s tone as positive and coopera- tive. Talking separately with news- men, Rep. John W. Burns of Wisconsin, senior Republican member of the .W a y s and Means Committee, said he ex- pects the panel to conclude the hearings in about 10 days and move immediately toward shap- ing the legislation. Ziegler said Senate D e m o- cratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana promised prompt action in the Senate. By The Associated Press Swiss banks cautiously floated the U.S. dol- lar yesterday for the first time since President Nixon severed its link with gold, and the Amer- ican currency stood this first big test well. Hardly a ripple resulted, despite the battering the dollar has taken on international money markets in recent weeks. The dollar sank only about 1 % per cent on the Swiss market. Nearly everywhere else foreign enchanges re- mained closed but banks and tourist agencies continued to satisfy the needs of tourists - within limits. But American tourists had to pay a premium in dollars to purchase foreign cur- rency in most countries. 4 The Swiss National Bank authorized commer- cial institutions to start unlimited trading in the dollar but said it would not intervene to steady the rate. This meant the dollar was afloat in the open market at the mercy of the forces of supply and demand - worth only what people were willing Ito pay for it. Bank officials said trading was limited because of continuing uncertainty over the future of ,the international monetary system, The dollar was quoted as high as 4.05 Swiss franks but later declined to 4.00. This amounted to a decline of just over 1 %/ per cent in the value of the dollar from Friday's level, when the American money was still being defended by the Swiss National Bank. West European governments, meanwhile, stud- ied ways of defending their economies from the threat of trade and monetary conflict between the United States and Japan, a clash that many Europeans feel would leave them in the middle. The 12-man monetary committee of the Euro- pean Common Market met in Brussels to study the implications of Nixon's action Sunday in cutting the ties with gold and imposing a 10 per cent surtax on a wide range of imported foreign goods. The trade war threat appeared to be forcing the Common Market countries to draw closer to- gether in the monetary field. After the committee meeting, an Italian dele- gate told newsmen: "It's a moment to do some- thing for Europe, not just for our individual countries." "The six of us must get together - and the seven too," said Pietro Micone, director-general of the Italian treasury. He was referring to Brit- ain who wants to join the Common Market. The six appeared to be moving toward firmer links between their own currencies while allowing them to float jointly in relation to the dollar and other money. This would lessen the impact of a cheaper dollar. See SWISS, Page 6