The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- -Friday, May 23, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages iii Jbess rate soars to 13-year I Trinity Doly Photo by DAVID HARRIS' No, local residents were not out to prove yesterday that it does, indeed, take three Ann Arborites to screw in a lightbulb-one to hold the lightbulb and two to turn the ladder. The trio was busy washing windows at Tower Plaza on Maynard St. Jury acquits former * Jonestowl11jn cultist Layton on 4 charges reeord From AP and UPI The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment insurance+ reached the highest levels in at least 13 years during early May, a new sign that the economy is falling into a deeper recession than the Carter ad- ministration predicts. The Labor Department reported Mobil Corp. cut the price of its gas 3 cents a gallon yesterday but Exxon raised its price 2 cents as Nigeria hiked the price of its oil. See Story, Page 8. yesterday that a seasonally adjusted 616,000 jobless people filed for unem- ployment insurance during the week ending May 10, up from 595,000 for the week ending May 3. The latest figures represented the highest number of initial claims for one week since the government began collecting seasonally adjusted data in 1967. THE WEEKLY unemployment claims information is a good indicator of changes in the nation's unem- ployment rate, which shot up from 6.2 per cent in March to 7 per cent in April. Economists saidyesterday that the new figures suggest that another sizable jump in unemployment will be revealed when the May rate is issued early next month. In Washington, the House yesterday passed a compromise bill ained at making sure that disabled workers don't make more from Social Security disability payments than they did on the job. Passage of the bill, worked out by a House-Senate conference, came on a 389-2 vote. The measure now goes to the Senate. THE PURPOSE of the bill is to give disabled workers an economic incen- tive to return to work as soon as possible. It would limit benefits for disabled workers and their families to 85 per cent of, the worker's previous earnings or to 150 per cent of the worker's. primary insurance amount, whichever is smaller. The limitation would apply to workers who first become eligible af- ter July 1. high The bill also is designed to prevent. younger workers from receiving more disability benefits than older workers with comparable wage histories. IN DETROIT, more than 40,000 tem- porarily idled U.S. automakers will return to their jobs next week but long- term unemployment-a more reliable measure of the industry's . strength-continues to edge upward. In contrast to the recent pattern of deep production cutbacks, U.S. automakers said yesterday they will - operate all but one car and four truck assembly plants next week, dropping short-term layoffs from 53,900 this week to 11,720beginning Tuesday. But indefinite layoffs climbed from 217,350 to 219,750, indicating a continued lack of confidence in real short-term improvement in the industry's dismal sales picture. SALES OF U.S.-BUILT cars so far this year are down 20 per cent from last year, but in early May the dropoff was 42 per cent-the slowest for that selling period in 22 years. The Federal Reserve Board began moving to make credit more available to American consumers and some businesses yesterday by reducing the See JOBLESS, Page 8 Prime [ending Rate Percent 21- - May22 O- Split Rate 19- 16% 15,2% 18- 17- 16- 15- _MJ F M A M From AP and UPI GEORGETOWN, Guyana-Larry Layton, a former People's Temple member, was acquitted yesterday of attempting to kill two temple defectors as they fled the cult's Jonestown set- tlement with a California congressman and four others who died in the fusillade. Layton, a former conscientious ob- jector from San Francisco, was found innocent by a Guyanese jury on two charges of firearms violations and two charges of attempted murder of the cult members who had been trying to flee with Rep. Leo Ryan (D-Calif.). THE SHOOTINGS preceded the mass suicide-murder of more than 900 per- sons at the colony Nov. 18, 1978. Layton still faces trial on charges of killing Ryan, three journalists, and another temple defector at the Port Kaituma airstrip near Jonestown. Ryan had visited the settlement to investigate alleged abuses of cult members by their leader Jim Jones. The two-woman, ten-man jury deliberated 2 hours before delivering the verdict. Layton's trial on charges of attempting to kill Monica Bagby and Vern Gosney, the two defectors, began May 6. In view of his acquittal on these harges, it appeared doubtful that Layton wouldever be convicted of any charges in Guyana. However, if he is set free and is deported, he could face charges in the United States of con- spiring to kill a congressman. FBI _See JURY, Page 7