Friday, October 5, 1973 t"HE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, October 5, 1973 [HE MICHIGAN DAILY Fodp biggest WASHINGTON (1P) - Farm, feed and processed food prices plunged a record 6 per cent in September to pace the biggest one - month decline in wholesale prices in 25 years, the govern- ment said yesterday. Chairman Herbert Stein of the President's Council of Economic Advisers called the drop in whole- sale prices "a welcome sign that the worst of the big 1973 surge of inflation is behind us." BUT AFL -CIO President George Meany, noting that whole- sale prices were still 16.6 per cent above a year ago, said there is no evidence this is the start of a trend. He predicted this "will prove to be only a momentary pause and prices will bounce up again" once the Cost of Living Council approves price increase requests. The September drop in whole- sale food prices is expected to begin showing up on supermarket shelves in the coming weeks. STEIN CAUTIONED, however, that consumers should not expect all of the decrease to be trans- lated into an equal decline in re- tail food prices as retailers move to recover costs frozen during the mid-summer price freeze. Nevertheless, he said it would "contribute to a leveling out of retail prices in the future." T h e L a b o r Department's Wholesale Price Index showed the over-all decline in wholesale prices last month was 1.8 per cent on an unadjusted basis, the most in any month since a 1.9 per cent drop in Feb. 1948. Sea- sonally adjusted, the decline was 1.5 per cent, matching the Feb. 1948 low on the same basis. LAST MONTH'S drop in whole- sale prices followed the biggest one-month rise in 27 years, a leap of 5.8 per cent from July to Aug., the period during which the administration I i f t e d the freeze on food prices. During the freeze in July, prices fell 1.3 per cent. The government said the de- cline was chiefly the result of lower prices for livestock and rices plunge; 2nd HIT WEEK! Fri. Open 6:45. Shows at 7 & 9. Sat, & Sun. at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 drop in years "a dream of exotic beauty" ---LEO LERMAN, -Mademoiselle "impossibly beautiful ... visually exquisite!" -BERNARD DREW, ,Gannett News Service corn, fresh and dried vegetables, live poultry and eggs. Raw cot- ton and milk prices increased, however. Prices of processed foods and feeds, the next step in the whole- sale food chain, also fell 6 per cent last. month, reflecting .de- clines in animal feed, meat and processed poultry prices. WHEN COMBINED with the drop in farm product prices, the over - all decline in the cate- gory of farm products, processed foods and feeds also was 6 per cent on an unadjusted basis and 5.2 per cent adjusted. Both were the biggest declines since the gov- ernment began keeping these sta- tistics in 1947. But despite the big Septem- ber drop, farm product prices were still 55.8 per cent higher than a year ago. A NOVEL BYIHERMANN HESSE / A F LM BY CONRAD ROOKS From COLUMBA ICTURES T RESTAKTEO O AP Photo Boredom sets in DETROIT TEACHERS VOTED yesterday to stay on strike, defying a circuit court order to return to work. Meanwhile, mothers and kids in Parkside Detroit wait it out and worry about going to school next summer. BIGGEST PUBLIC DEMONSTRATION: .. Israeli students protest against shut-down of Schoenan castle JERUSALEM (Reuter)-Thous- ands of students demonstrated in three Israeli cities yesterday against Austria's decision to limit transit facilities for Soviet Jews, in the biggest public protests so far. The protests, all peaceful, were a sign of the continuing anger and frustration here at the Aus- trian refusal to reverse its deci- sion to close down the Schoe- nau Castle transit center near Vienna and end group transit fa- Gallop poll shows.Nixon less popular PRINCETON, N. J. (I') -- Ap- proval of President Nixon's per- formance in office dipped again in the latest Gallup poll. Fewer than one-third of 1,505 adult, Americans surveyed Sept. 21 to, 24 voiced approval when asked, "Do you approve or dis- approve of the way Nixon is han- dling his job as President?" On- ly 38 per cent voiced approval when asked in the last poll in late August. NIXON'S popularity sank to its lowest point, 31 per cent approv- al, in early August during the televised Watergate hearings. His highest popularity, 68 per cent approval, occurred last Jan- uary following the Vietnam peace settlement. cilities for Soviet Jewish emigres on their way to Israel. THEY TOOK PLACE as Prime Minister Golda Meir was report- ing on her abortive talks with Austria's Jewish-born chancellor Bruno Kreisky to the Knesset (Parliament committee on secur- ity and foreign affairs in which leaders of the Jewish Agency- the quasi - official body respon- sible for Schoenau and immigra- tion generally. A f t e r hearing heru report Wednesday the cabinet issued a communique indicating that Is- rael had no intention of easing the pressure on Austria to change its mind, saying the explanation Kreisky had given Meir, for his decision; "is not one to satisfy the government of, Israel "and does not repair the damage that has been done." Meanwhile, the widely - circu- lated evening newspaper Maariv carried an interview from Vienna with the Austriah Interior Minis- ter, Dr. Otto Roesch, in which he promised there would'be no clos- ure of Schoenau or change in the transit facilities until other ar- rangements had been made.' HE SAID he had etablished high - level planning team to arrange for the direct transfer of emigres from the Austrian border to Vienna airport for flights to Israel, with the flow regulated by the issue of Austrian visas in Moscow. A ATHE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 26 F'riday, October 5, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106, Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area);$11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mall (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mal (other states and foreign). DO YOU KNOW THE LEGEND OF THE LONE RANGER? FRI. & SAT. at 8& 10 p.m. ADMISSION 75c SEASON PASS $5.00 Couzens Cafeteria A Couzen's Film Coop Presentation fit MICHELANGELO ANTONIONI'S VVN TRAl A girl mysteriously disappears on a yachting trip, and her lover and best friend begin an affair in the resulting vacuum. In a recent international poll for SIGHT AND SOUND, L'AVVENTURA was among the best five films ever made. By the -director who brought you BLOW-UP. 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