The Michigan Daily-Thursday, June 15, 1978-Page 7 Carter aide: inflation attack vital WASHINGTON (AP) - A key mem- ber of the Carter administration predic- ted yesterday the United States is headed for another recession if progress isn't made against inflation in the next six months. "I give the economy no more than six months. If we can't do something this year about inflation, we are going back into another recession," said Barry Bosworth, director of the Council on Wage and.Price Stability. "We have just put this economy through a roller-coaster and no one knows where it's going. . . We are rapidly emerging into a state of chaos," he said ina speech. HE SAID later in elaborating on his remarks that he didn't know when a recession would occur. "I don't know the timing.. . The point I was making is that we have six months to demon- strate progress, or pressures will mount for a recession." It was the first time a key member of the administration has expressed con-. cern publicly about the possibility of a recession. Chairman William Miller of the independent Federal Reserve Board has previously warned of a recession because of inflation. Bosworth told a meeting of the Airline Pilots Association here that the threat of a recession can already be seen in the "policy of the Federal Reserve Board," which has been raising interest rates, and "the public screaming" for the government to do something about inflation. CONSUMER PRICES have been rising at a rate of about 10 per cent the past three months. Meanwhile, Carter told a news con- ference that Congress has a respon- sibility to help control inflation by holding down federal spending and that he would veto a $1.4 billion public works spending bill if it contains water projec- ts previously abandoned by Congress. Carter also said that California communities can't routinely expect the federal government to offset the loss of revenue from the recent property tax rollback in that state. "I DON'T think there is any possibility of our passing specific laws just to deal with California ... We have no inclination to seek out California for special treatment just because they have lowered property taxes," he said. Earlier Wednesday, Budget Director James McIntyre Jr., said a growing taxpayer revolt in the nation probably is directed as much at the federal government as at state and local governments. A GOP plan to cut individual federal income taxes by an average of 33 per cent picked up its first Democratic sup- porter yesterday in the Senate. SEN. SAM NUNN (D-Ga.), endorsed the plan and said: "Clearly, the message with respect to levying taxes is: like shearing sheep, you stop when you reach the skin." Bosworth, in stressing the need to bring inflation more under control, said the administration of former President Richard Nixon purposely created the recession of 1974-75 in an unsuccessful effort to control inflation in that period, and he said another recession would be equally unsuccessful. In an appeal to major labor unions to cooperate in the anti-inflation fight by restraining wages, Bosworth said statements by George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, that unions would wait until prices slowed before slowing wage demands were "nonsen- se." See CARTER, Page 11 hurt CIA Helms says public cirticism has WASHINGTON (AP)-Former CIA Director Richard Helms says criticism of the agency has resulted in "a hobbled service, the illusion that you have an effective service, but don't have one." Helms, onteime CIA Director William Colby and Thomas Karamessines, the agency's former direc- tor of clandestine activities, gave their views in an interview scheduled for broadcast last night by the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). "In light of what's happened to our country in the last few years and the manner in which we've managed to tear our intelligence services apart, if I were the head of the KGB sitting in Mowcow, I would be absolutely delighted," Karamessines said. PORTIONS OF THE trio's interview filmed at CIA headquarters were subject to review for security reasons. But the program's sponsors said the CIA exercised no editorial control over the broadcast, which was made available to about 200 educational television stations. Colby agreed with Helms' assertion that the CIA has been harmed by public criticism. "We have foreign intelligence services where they have crimped down on the kind of sensitive in- formation they used to share with us," he said. "And we are now barred from that material. I think we've hurt ourselves in that respect." Karamessines was asked about possible CIA in- filtration of terrorist groups abroad. "I'LL HAVE TO be a little gingerly in describing it but we did have an agent overseas who was a penetration of a terrorist organization," he said. "And this agent did report that a certain attempt would be made on the life of Golda Meir in New York. "That was in the early 70s. And it did develop that the report we had was accurate and the only thing further to say is that Mrs. Meir is still alive and kicking. Thank goodness." Colby was asked about abortive CIA plots to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro. "Of course he is still alive-not for lack of CIA trying," Colby said. "ONE OF THE FINDINGS after eight months of study by the Senate committee on assassinations was that no foreign leader had ever been assassinated by CIA," he added. "Now I think that's a different impression than the sensational reputation that CIA has around the world." Colby was asked about assertions that the CIA was involved in the Watergate scandal. Referring to H. R. haldenan and John Ehrlichman, two former top aides to President Richard Nixon, he said: "Well, I think the Haldeman and Ehrlichman books are absolutely outr.Igeious. Two people in whose credibility I don't think anybody can give any warrant whatsoever trying to put the red herring across the trail, of saying theword CIA so that they can somehow stand as either reformed or even in- nocent in their original activities." M th a SE 5' ci a p a 0' tv t w p P P 0t w rf India refuses nuclear safeguards WASHINGTON (AP) - Indian Prime additions to the arsenals, and that they until the 1980 deadline, President Car- inister Morarji Desai said yesterday will be reduced and finished within a ter has decided to continue shipments at even if the United States completes decade." of fuel to India. The House Inter- comprehensive test ban treaty and a India and the United States are national Relations Committee on Wed- ALT II agreement, India will not ac- headed for a confrontation in 1980 over nesday voted to go along with that ept full scale nuclear safeguards. whether the United States will continue policy. Desai's statement indicated that he to supply nuclear fuel for India's Desai said India was prepared to ac- ad yielded no ground on the nuclear Tarapur power plant near Bombay. cept the consequences of its position. afeguards issue during two days of The United States has a contract to iscussins with President Carter. supply the fuel until 1983. INDIA HAS received nuclear sup- AMERICAN officials, speaking But under a nuclear non-proliferation plies from several other countries, in- rivately, say their best hope for law passed this year, the United States cluding Canada and the Soviet Union. voiding a confrontation with India must, by 1980, cut off shipments to D . ver the issue has been to include the countries which do not accept inter- Desai said the "real threat of a wo treaties and then persuade India national safeguards which monitor nuclear holocaust comes from un- hat it can accept the safeguards what happens to all their nuclear fuel checked vertical proliferation, which 'ithout losing face or a chance to ex- THE LAW is designed to help prevent every year icreases the probability of boit peaceful nuclear technology. what happened in 1974, when Indian war by accident, if not ambition." But Desai, speaking to the National scientists developed an atomic bomb, Vertical proliferation refers to the in- ress Club, said the United States and using nuclear material that originated creasing number of missiles and ther countries with nuclear weapons as reactor fuel. warheads deployed by the super- ill have to go further to satisfy India's Desai has pledged that India will powers. Horizontal proliferation is the equirements. conduct no more tests. But at the same increase in the number of countries India would agree to safeguards time, he has refused to accept the which have nuclear weaponf n onl if the militar reactors in the cafA dt Dimino the time remaining I Sat. Sun. Wed.,]3-57.a 10lnnie Hiall I Mon., Tues., Turs. Fri., 7-9 Sot Sun Wed 1-3-5-7-9 TYCC6N I Vly 1 u 11 tiY Gtw S11t1 countries with nuclear weapons are also changed to civilian, and they are also open to inspection," he said. DESAI SAID India feels the only sure safeguard in the nuclear field would be an agreement by the countries with nuclear weapons "that there will be no MARC HAS MOVED (Medieval and Renaissance Collegium) tab Tyler East Quad Phone: 763-2066 'saeguarub . g g61 .IiCi~idtlt U U The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at AUD A Thursday, June 15 LAST TANGO IN PARIS (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1973) 7 & 9:15-AUD A MARLON BRANDO oppears os a sexually aggressive expatriate who embarks on a three-day affair with Jeanne (MARIA SCHNEIDER). a young, modish Parisienne. The affair is a purely physical. *solatd exper'en"e. and the apartment on island in which are examined certain aspec.ts of human relationships. With JEAN-PIERRE LEAUD. "A film that has mode the strongest impression on me in almost twenty years of reviewing -Pouline Koel.,R RtedX.Music by Oliver Nelson and Goto Barbieri. In English and French ,with suhaitIes. Tomorrow; Lubitsch's "TROUBLE IN PARADISE" & "THE MERRY WIDOW" on Tues Thurs., Fri., 7-9 Sat. Sun Wed 1-3-5-7-9 R