The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 20, 1980-Page 17 Indonesia, Algeria, Libya boost oil prices ByTA e$3-a-barrel "exploration fee" will put yThe Associated Pressthe total cost at $38.21 per barrel. Indonesia announced a $2-per-barrel Algeria produces about one million boost in crude oil prices yesterday, as barrels of oil daily. Algeria and Libya reportedly posted in- Meanwhile, Petroleum Intelligence creases as well. The increases came on Weekly, a New York-based newsletter, top of price increases announced last reported that Libya increased its crude week by Saudi Arabia and Mexico. oil prices by $2 a barrel, retroactive to The increases ranging from $1 to $2 May 15. This brings the price of Libya's per barrel by the five nations could benchmark export crude to $36.12 a raise U.S. retail gasoline and heating barrel, the publication, said. Libya oil prices by about two cents per gallon, produces more than two million barrels said Ted Eck, chief economist of Stan- a day. dard Oil of Indiana. Mexico raised the price of about half INDONESIA SAID its best North of its oil production by $1.50, to $33.50 a Sumatran crude will cost $34.75 per 42- barrel, effective Thursday. Saudi gallon barrel, effective today. The Arabia announced Wednesday it had nation exports 1.1 million barrels of its raised its price from $26 to $28 a barrel total production of about J.6 billion effective April 1. barrels a day. Mexico exports about 900,000 barrels A Japanese news agency reported a day, and Saudi Arabia produces about Algeria had notified.'Japanese oil 9.5 million barrels daily. refiners that it had'raised its crude oil Indonesia, Algeria, Libya and Saudi price by $1 a barrel to $35.21 retroactive Arabia are members of the to May 16. Officials of the French oil in- Organization of Petroleum Exporting dustry in Paris also said ,Algeria had Countries. Mexico is not a-member of told its customers of the $1-a-barrel the cartel but-uses OPEC prices as a price increase and noted that Algeria's guideline. WHArs ThE ULTIMATE 4 1E7R A Mp fD T'eMOW& T74ATn GROSS, OF- AIS IVE. AL4NJCH v4AD PERMISS VRL? My kind of town ^P Ph'0o Interpreting this Washtenaw Ave. billboard in a way never dreamed of by the printer s of the sign, graffiti artists let travelers know what their idea of Ann Arbor's "style" is all about. 'U' artist, professor, LaMore dead at 71 Chet LaMore, professor emeritus of art at the University who was widely known for his paintings and sculpture, died in Ann Arbor Saturday after a brief illness. He was 71. LaMore was "one of the two or three most important painters in the Detroit metropolitan area," according to Robert Iglehart, University School of Art colleague and local art critic. LaMore's works, which ranged from social protest paintings to abstracts, are in the permanent collections of the New York Museum of Modern Art, Metropolitan Museum, Library of Congress, Buffalo Museum, Brooklyn Art Museum, the Syracuse, San Diego and Dallas museums, and many others. He was also known for his sculptural works, including metal sculpture featuring owls and other birds. LAMORE WAS A leading collector of primitive art, including African, Oceanic, and American Indian works. He had received several Rackham 'grants to study American Indian art, and had donated several works in his collection to the University Museum of Art. He is survived by his widow, Mary. There will be no public memorial ser- vice. Contributions may be made to the scholarship fund at the School of Art. LaMore joined the University faculty in 1947 after teaching at the University of Buffalo, the Albright Art School in Buffalo, and Syracuse University. He retired from the University in 1973. 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The University Extension Service, Independent Study Department, offers courses in many subject fields, including: Literature Accounting Languages Economics Psychology Geography Conservation Writing Political Science Math Each course has an assigned instructor, who consults with you through the mail or over the telephone. And don't worry about not finishing up the course. over the summer-you may take as long as a year to complete it. Fees are $50 per credit hour, undergraduate, or $52, graduate. Drop into the office, or call today to get full details on how you can make this a credit-bearing summer! Independent Study Dept. U-M EXTENSION SERVICE 412 Maynard St. 763-2042