Tesday, May1 , 971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine I Tuesday~ May 1 1, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Page Nine~r 1 American dollar sees history of crisis {Conined from Page 6) faith and disrupting the world monetary system. Instead, three other steps were taken: -Congress eliminated the re- quirement that a fixed amount of gold must be kept in the fed- eral supply. As the total on hand had been declining toward that fixed amount, gold sales ha d increased as buyers through the United States would run out of gold it could sell. -The seven-member London gold pool that includes the United States set up a dual pric- ing system. Gold sold in inter- national mo n e tar y dealings would remain at $35 an ounce, but gold sold f or commercial purposes such as jewelry or in the private speculative market would sell at a floating market price. A Member nations of the Inter- national Monetary Fund approv- ed a longstanding plan to create Special Drawing Rights, or so called paper gold. These ,ights are essentially a bookkeeping device based on solemn national promises to honor them in mon- etary transactions. Their crea- tion provided for an orderly in- crease in the monetary reserves necessary for continuing world trade expansion and took some of the pressure off gold as the source of such reserves. Within three months of the March crisis, gold was flowing back to the United States, By December 1969, demand for gold by speculators was so low that its price on the free market was barely above the $35 monetary market price. Renew- ed confidence in the world's pa- per money was cited by experts as a key reason. Despite the easing of pressure on the dollar in terms of gold, it has remained occasionally un- der pressure in relation to oth- er currencies as the United States continues to experience balance-of-payments deficits. In early autumn 1969, dollars were heavily sold in favor of West German marks. The Ger- man government first set the mark free to find its own value, then in October 1969 revalued it from 25 U.S. cents to 27.3 cents. Internal German economic considerations weighed heavily, but speculators betting the Mark would be revalued won. Now West German currency a g a i n is bringing pressure against the dollar, a n d there likely will be other crises still ahead. Smokey's friends don't play with matches. Mixed Bowling League SUMMER RATES win a SIGN UP NOW! Free Game Open at Noon MICHIGAN UNION Student Services Counseling' Office 24 Hour Counseling, Referral, and Information Dial 76-GUID[ " Immediate help for a wide range of problems and questions. " Information about and referral to campus and community resources for any problem. " Someone to listen when you need to talk ... some- one who will respond if no one else seems to.. " All calls and requests are confidential and a pro- fessional counseling staff is available to help. U U VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS WAGON WERKE SPRING TUNE-UP SALE -COUPON- * WITH THIS COUPON A SPRING * TUNE-UP INCLUDING PLUGS AND POINTS i only 12.95 t SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE * AND WARRANTEED WORK 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor-Phone: 662-2576 GOOD UNTIL SAT., MAY 22 Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 764-0558 THE UNBEATABLE VALUE FROM SONY IS NOW THE UNBELIEVABLE VALUE FROM SONY It's the SONY TC-60 cassette-corder, now priced at an un- believable low $49.95. On sale during this Merry Month of May at HIFl BUYS. Here's all the features you could wish for on a portable recorder. * AC/DC Operation * Easy Pushbutton Controls * Remote Microphone * Earphone It's the Student Sony now on sale at a new low price-just during the month of May. So don't put it off any longer you've only got 20 days left! what's new under the sun for Miss J is here in a collection of bikinis, two-piece boy-leg Suits and coverups tingling with color and vivid prints in acrylics, velours and acetate knits. Sizes 5113. Swimsuits, $15-$25. 46 J~oro lIt-FI BUYS An Arbor-East Lansing 611 S. MAIN 769-4700 'Quality Sound Through Qsality Equipment" , Jacob~or'S