Monday May 23, 1977
. . . where the 1970s live forever!

News stories from Monday May 23, 1977


Summaries of the stories the major media outlets considered to be of particular importance on this date:

  • Menachem Begin, who is scheduled to be Israel's next Prime Minister, was taken to a hospital suffering from chest pains. He was reported resting comfortably. His aides said his illness was apparently not serious, and was a result of insufficient recuperation from a heart attack in April. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin announced that he would resume the leadership of his caretaker government. [New York Times]
  • The Supreme Court refused to hear the appeals of John Mitchell, H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman from their convictions in the Watergate cover-up case. The Court gave no explanation and no indication of how the Justices had voted, but it said that Justice William Rehnquist had not participated. The refusal means, barring some unlikely development such as the Court's reconsideration of the case, that the three men must each serve terms of from two and a half to eight years in prison. [New York Times]
  • President Carter signed a bill that will cut more than $5 billion this year from the taxes of low-Income and middle-income people. The reduction is part of a federal tax cut that will be spread over the next 28 months. The bill will also simplify most filing procedures, eliminate tax payments for three million low-income families and reduce by slightly more than $2 the average weekly payroll deduction of nearly 50 million people who use the revised standard deduction included in the law. But two million others who earn more than $13,750 annually and claim the standard deduction can expect tax increases of about $50. [New York Times]
  • President Carter was warned by the Speaker of the House, Tip O'Neill, not to veto funds for water projects if he did not want a serious confrontation with Congress. Mr. O'Neill praised the President for warmth, dedication and morality but said he had told him "a half dozen times" that if he wants to be remembered as a great president he will have to have the support of Congress. [New York Times]
  • Stock prices plunged under selling pressure, bringing the Dow Jones industrial average down 13.40 points to 917.06, its biggest daily loss since Nov. 5, 1976. In the last three sessions, the Dow has lost a total of 24.85 points, Losing stocks outnumbered rising ones by a ratio of 4 to 1, with glamour and blue-chip issues among the weakest. Rising interest rates brought about by the Federal Reserve Board's recent credit tightening was blamed for the urge to sell. [New York Times]
  • The new jobs credit clause of President Carter's tax bill -- an employment incentive -- has economists divided over its likely accomplishments. It is regarded by some as the most important innovation in tax policy in a generation, and denounced by others, including the administration, as cumbersome, unfair and a waste of the taxpayers' money. The credit is intended mainly to help labor-intensive small business. It gives all employers a tax credit based on the number of new workers they hire above a base level of 102 percent of last year's payroll. Depending on a number of variable factors, the credit ranges from $630 to $1,806 per employee. [New York Times]
  • Transplanted genes have enabled bacteria to produce the gene for insulin in experiments at the University of California at San Francisco. The next goal is to persuade them to make insulin itself, which would likely result in a virtually limitless supply of this vital hormone and have an important impact on understanding and treatment of diabetes. [New York Times]
  • South Moluccan exiles living in the Netherlands were holding 161 hostages in an elementary school and a hijacked train, apparently in a new effort to force the Dutch government to help them in their fight for independence from Indonesia for their homeland. In 1975, two South Moluccan gangs hijacked a Dutch train and seized the Indonesian consulate in Amsterdam. The police said that 105 children and six teachers were being held at the village school of Bovensmilde and that there were 50 hostages on the train near the village of Assen in a northern farming region. [New York Times]


Stock Market Report

Dow Jones Industrial Average: 917.06 (-13.40, -1.44%)
S&P Composite: 98.15 (-1.30, -1.31%)
Arms Index: 1.92

IssuesVolume*
Advances3271.99
Declines1,17513.74
Unchanged4052.56
Total Volume18.29
* in millions of shares

Arms Index is the ratio of volume per declining issue to volume per advancing issue; a figure below 1.0 is bullish.

Market Index Trends
DateDJIAS&PVolume*
May 20, 1977930.4699.4518.95
May 19, 1977936.4899.8821.28
May 18, 1977941.91100.3027.80
May 17, 1977936.4899.7722.29
May 16, 1977932.5099.4721.17
May 13, 1977928.3499.0319.78
May 12, 1977925.5498.7321.98
May 11, 1977926.9098.7818.98
May 10, 1977936.1499.4721.09
May 9, 1977933.9099.1815.23


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