The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVII, No. 40-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 9, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Jobess rate increases to A. 7.1 in June By AP and UPI A rise in the nation's jobless rate to 7.1 per cent in June, along with some other recent unfavorable economic develop- ments, "may be the beginning of some serious trouble," a leading economist said yester- day. "We will have to be diligent and, watch it very closely," Julius Shiskin told the Joint Economic Committee of Con- gress after the government re- ported the rise in unemploy- ment from May's 6.9 per cent. BUT SHISHKIN, THE com- missioner of the Labor Depart- ment's Bureau of Labor Statis- tics said he doesn't think the nation's economy is running out of steam, adding that he ex- pects unemployment to decline .,gain later in the year. Carter administrations econo- mists were pleased by a sec- ond report yesterday that show- ed wholesale prices declined six-tenths of 1 per cent in June, the first drop in this key infla- tion index in 10 months and he largest decline in nearly Making a splash Twelve-year-ol Sandy McGee of Union Lake gets sone welco'e relief from the high tempera- tures and hemidity which have been plaguing southern Michigan residents all week. four years. The decline was particularly welcome since inflation had shown signs of getting out of nand again in recent months. Wholesale prices had increased four-tenths of 1 per cent in May following big jumps of 1.1 per cent in each of March and April. A WHOPPING 6.3 per cent drop in farm prices accounted ;or most of the decline, as prices fell for just about every- 'ihing produced on the farm ex- cept milk. There were lower prices for vegetables, grains, coffee, eggs, poultry and cat- tie. That was good news for con- sumers, who can expect to find their grocery bills are rising less sharply in weeks ahead, but bad news for farmers, who are faced with declining in- 'ome. In his appearance before Sen. William Proxmire's eco- nomic committee, Shishkin said ':he unemployment and price re- ports should not be considered as setting trends that will con- tinue in the months ahead. Both employment and unem- oloyment increased in June as more persons entered the job market. The number of people with jobs rose 270,000 to 90.7 million, while unemployment rose 210,000 to seven million. IN MICHIGAN, unemploy- ment increased slightly during the month of June, but the MichigantEmployment Security Commission (MESC) reported C esterday that the number of people working reached a re- cord high last month. Michigan's jobless rate last uionth was 6.8 per cent, up from 6.6 per cent in May. The number of persons out of work in the state rose by 14,300 to a total of 281,700. A year ago, there were 377,300 unemployed - 9.3 per cent of the state's labor force. Though the jobless rate in- creased, MESC director S. Mar- tin Taylor said total employ- ment reached a record level in Michigan due to an influx of moung people looking for sum- mer jobs. Explosion rips Alaska pipeline; oil flow halts By AP and UPI A major explosion and fire ripped through an Alaska pipe- line station yesterday,- shutting down the $9 billion, 800-mile sys- tem, Alyeska Pipeline Co. said. Officials were unable to give an exact number of injured in the explosion. Within two hours of the incident, five persons had been hospitalized in area hos- pitals and a sixth person was treated and released. One of the injured had serious burns, but was not considered in critical condition. An attendant at Fairbanks Memorial Bospital said, "We are having a mass casualty and I don't have time to talk." A physician said the hospital was expecting about 40 injured workers. Fire and rescue personnel from Pump Station No. 9, Fort Wainwright and Eilsen Air Force Base rushed to the scene. The lured workers were flown by helicopter to the hospital. De- tails of the nature of the injuries were not immediately deter- mi , ed, The fire, which began at 3:45 p.m. ADT, was under control by 5:45 p.m. (10:45 p.m. EDT and -"was burning out," Alyes- ka said. Oil leaked out to a distance of 200 yards from the pump station but did not reach several large storage tanks and the storage tanks were not damaged. "The building was a mass of wisted steel and rubble. The damage was contained to the station and not the entire com- plex," according to KJNP re- porter Neil Cook, who saw the building from a distance. Re- :orters were not allowed into he complex, which contains several buildings. Cook also said, "The walls were buckled and bent in. Walls and girders have collapsed, in on the structure . . . a large amount of equipment was de- stroyed as exploding oil spread over them. Many workers at the site were pretty well herd- Fd into one area for safety pur- , odes." There was no immediate word on the cause of the ex- plosion. Witnesses reported a large fire in the area.. A small oil spill was report-" ed inside the station, but there vere no reports of a spill from the pipe itself. Alyeska Pipeline headquarter officials at Anchorage said the explosion and fire occurred in the main building of Pump Station No. 8, about 25 miles southeast of Fairbanks, as the second pump at the station was being put into operation. A law enforcement source said he understood that the ex- plosion did not damage the pipeline. Pump Station No. 8 was the site of a nitrogen leak earlier this week that resulted in a 2% - 'ay shutdown of oil movement through the pipeline. Oil had begun passing through the station earlier in the day and was as far as 30 miles south of there at the time of the explosion. Pump Station No. 8 is at milepost 488 along the 800-mile pipeline and is about 25 miles south of here. V ur keep nurses waiting - By KEITH B. RICHBURG special to the natly DETROIT-The jury has everyone waiting while they deliberate the fate of Filipina Narciso and Leonora Perez, two Veteran's Administration (VA) nurses accused of poisoning their former patients. The nine women and three men already passed the record four-day deliberation time for a federal court jury here in the Eastern District of Mich- igan. That record was set by the jurors deliberat- ing i nthe trial of refuted mafia chieftain Anthony Giacolone. YESTERDAY MARKED the tenth day of the jury's deliberation. They will continue working the weekend in their narrow, windowed room. Speculation has arisen from parties on both sides of the case, and from observers, that the jury could still be undecided until well into next week. These speculations are based on the jury's re- quest for certain pieces of evidence which pertain to specific counts in the nine-count indictment. Their requests give some credence to the belief that the jury is considering each of the nine charges in sequential order and therefore are only about half-way done with their task. See VA, Page 4