[ HE''1Vti . C'-N GAN DAI L ,' Wednesday, February 27, 1974 Il-jE MCHIGAN CAlL': Wednesday, February 27, 1974 :es rise in January Liberal tops British poll; VASMINGTON (M) - The an- al retail cost of a grocery mar- basket of food jumped to a ord $1,680 spurred by an in- ased farm prices, for major d items during the month of auary, the U. S. Department Agriculture reported yester- fficials said the January in- ase in food costs was up an aual rate of 1.8 per cent and uld cost consumers an addi- nal $305 a year for food. )EPARTMENT OF Agricul- e economists predict that food prices will continue to rise through mid-year and perhaps even longer unless a record har- vest lowers overall prices. For all of 1974, USDA econo- mists predict grocery store price increases of as much as 16 per cent above last years level. The market basket, which in- cludes only U. S. farm-produced food, is theoretically enough to feed a household of 3.2 people for an entire year. THE PRICE increase was led by increases in the cost of beef, Join The Daily Staff Phone 7.64-0558 which rose 6.4 per cent in Janu- ary over the average all-cut cost in December. Other calculations showed that farmers received $769 as their share of the retail basket cost in January, up $47 or 6.6 per cent from the annual rate in De- cember. Compared with a year earlier, farmers in January got 29.1 per cent more or $173. Middlemen, whose margins for processing and selling food had been expanding for months, had a reduced share in January of $911, a decline of $17 or $1.8 per cent from December. But the figures showed middle- man spreads were up $132 or 17 per cent from January 1973. The figures were compiled by USDA technicians at the request of reporters. SKI UTAH COLORADO Spring Break 3/1-3/10 with A3-AYH $224.O INCLUDES All lifts for 7 days All food for whole trip All accommodations All transportation X-country equipment supplied,. sauna, swim Cook outs and many extra. MEET: WED. 2/27-8 P.M. UNION ASSY. HALL INFO: BRAD, 449-2668 A m I IA TP TI II' fM wr Afi CAmr 1I election begins tomorrow ADI VKAIJUVI lL J I UULIII J VY LLIIL AP Photo BRITISH LIBERAL PARTY leader Jeremy Thorpe appears on closed circuit television yesterday to address his party's press conference at party headquarters in London. With only one full day to go before British voters choose a new Parliament, the London Daily Mail reports that middle-of-the-road Thorpe topped their personal preference poll with a vote of 33 per cent. mu m rur, r i GRAD COFFEE HOUR i MONE" LONDON () - Jeremy Thorpe, the leader of Britain's middle- of-the-road Liberal party, emer- ged yesterday as the man most popular among the e untry's three candidates for prime mm- ister. Until last year the joke was that his minority party had so few legislators compared ti the major electoral contenders -- the Labor and Conservative narties- that he could take all five to Par- liament in one London taxi. A STRING of special ele,;tion victories pushed the number to 11, but his party still trails far behind the Big Two. A stana- off, however, could leave the Liberals in a crucial swing posi- tion, able to trade their support for policies they favor. The lean-faced 43 year-old Thorpe has boosted his party's .chances by being named the par- ty leader who has most impres- sed the nation in the bitter ca-n- paign. With only one full day to go before Britons vote Thursday, the Daily, Mail newspaper reported that Thorpe topped a personal popularity poll with 33 per cent. That was a six-point leap since the last poll five days ago. PRIME MINISTER Edward Heath, silver-haired leader of the incumbent Conservatives, tumbled into second place with 25 per cent, down from 27 per cent. Labor leader Harold XVil- son stayed at 20 per cent, and ABORTION ALTERNATIVE OFFERED BY Problem Pregnancy Help 24 hr. phone: 769-7283 Office: Basement-400 S.. Division (corner of William) Hrs. Mon.-Thurs. 1-4:30 p.m. Thurs. evening 6-9 p.m. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING WEDNESDAY 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM 22 per cent of Britons ques- tioned would not commit them- selves. Thorpe, an ex-lawyer and tele- vision personality given to sport- ing velvet-collared rairi.oats, brushed aside the polls. Personal- ity cult polls, he snorted, a r e "a lot of old rubbish. I think politics are more serious than that." His surge in popularity came as a national opinion poll gave the Liberals 22 per cent of the vote - up from 16.9 in one of its sur- veys five days ago. The party only took seven per cent in the 1970 parliamentary election. THE CONSERVATIVE percent- age tumbled from 43.4 five days ago to 40.4 and Labor's from 37.8 to 35.5, the poll reported. Thi Liberals have rapidly gain- ed on the two giant parties since the campaign kicked off nearly three weeks ago. Their reported breakthrough could signal the end of the once-great party's half- century in the doldrums and the- oretically win them as many as 60 seats in the 635-member House of Commons. The Liberals, who claim to bridge the gap between big business and labor unions, seek to create a boss-worker partner-, ship in factories to end crippling industrial turmoil, to decentral- ize government with regional as- sembliestand to improve the,.wel- fare state. ALL PARTIES launched final drives to capture the moderate vote, regarded as th ekey to vic- tory in the feud-scarred 'cam- paign. Although the Conservatives still held their lead in the polls, com- mentators noted that yesterday's survey was conducted before the government announced the na- tion's biggest-ever monthly trade deficit of $880.9 million in Jan- uary. M PIN BOWLING March 2-10 WIN A FREE GAME Michigan Union Michigan Union OPEN REGULAR HOURS DURING BREAK 11 -- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Wednesday, February 17 "Weak Neutral Currents," P-A Bldg. Coflog. Rm., 4 pm. Day Calendar Ext. Service, English: poetry reading, Commission for Women: Regents' P. Levine, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 pm. Rm., noon. Gerontology: M. McGuire, Waiing- Computing Ctr.: D. Atkins, "Present ton D.C., "Housing the Elderly:'Can & Future Roles of Microprocessors," Social Policy Support Viable ,Life 120 P-A Bldg., noon. Styles," 2064 Frieze Bldg., 7 pm. , Ctr. Russian, E. European Studies: V. Ethics, Religion, UAC: "Sunseed," Dunham, WSU, "The Twin Roots of documentary of eastern religious teach- Meshchanstro," Commons Rm., Lane ers, Mendelssohn Theatre, 7, 9:30 pm. Hail, noon.t Music School: M. Ramos, guitarist, Anatomy: W. Castor, "Connective Rackham Aud., 8 pm. Tissue Activation," 4808 Med. Set. II, Career Planning and Placement 1:10 pm. 3200 SAB, 764-7460 Ctr. Russian, E. European Studies: B. - Psychology majors interested in treat- Bociurkiw, Carleton U, "Church.State ment of disturbed children, full time Relations in Eastern Europe: A Com- counselor positions as well as .a com- parative Analysis," E. Conf. Rm., Rack- bined program of graduate study and ham, 4 pm. assistantships a reopen at U of Chi- Psych Film Series: "Chanegs: P. C. cago. Write: Director of Orthogenic Friend;" "Railroad Agent;" "Babbitt;" School, 1365 E. 60th St., Chicago 60637. "They Want to Make work Human Engineering seniors interested in Again," Aud. 3, MLB, 4 pm. health-care delivery, apply to MS pro- Industrial & Op. Engineering: M. gram with paid internship at *; hos- Fisher, U of Chicago, "A Dual Algo- - pital in clinical engr., at Case Western rithm for the One-Machine Scheduling Reserve U., Cleveland 44106. Problem," 229 W. Engin., 4 pm. . $2700 fellowships for 1-yr. MA in mu- Statistics: A. Liebetrau, "Estimation sic at Eastern Wash. State College, of the Second-Order Properties of a. Cheney, Wash. 99004. Deadline March 1. Stationary Point Process," 1007 Angell For recruiter appointments call 764- Hall, 4 pm. 7456; appointments will not be made Physics: A. Pals, Rockefeller U. at any other number. Ii, -'IN DIMENSIONS OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE LECTURE AND DISCUSSION SERIES SOUTH AMERICAN "Shamanistic, Yogic, Gnostic, Socio Economics" (quote by Gory Snyder, Earth Household) FEBRUARY 26 and 27, 1974 Johnny Earles, Tues., 7:30, Angell, Aud. D INCA MIND AND-COSMOLOGY Michael Horner, Wed. 3:00, Angell, Aud. A .SHAMANISM AND HALLUCINOGENS (Jivaro: People of the Sacred Waterfalls) Mick Taussig, Wed. 7:30, Angell, Aud. D SHAMANISM, RELIGION AND THE SPIRITUALITY OF RURAL CAPITALISM (in Northwestern South America) Concluding panel discussion with the participants following Wed. lecture MARCH 13, WEDNESDAY 3-5 p.m.., ANGELL, AUD. A. AQUA RIAN AGE CONSCIOUSNESS THROUGH THE CELESTIAL ARTS: THE SPIRITUAL SIGNIFICANCE OF 1974 by RAYMOND MERRIMAN Sponsored by Office of Ethics and Religion, 3rd floor. Michigan Union 764-7442 Join the movement, baby. People on campuses are finding that our little jars of Gerber baby food make great snacks. And when you think about it, why shouldn't an adult like them? Our little jars of pudding are every bit as good as the canned snack puddings you're probably eating now. And they cost less. Lots of good pudding flavors, too. Chocolate cus- tard, vanilla custard and cherry vanilla. And we make other tasty little items. Blueberry buckle, Dutch apple dessert, peach cobbler and rasp- berry cobbler. Little jars of fruit, too. Bananas with pineapple, applesauce. What's more, Gerber baby foods need no refrigera- tion until they're opened. So you can keep them right on your desk. (Or hide them in a dresser drawer, if you're sensitive.) 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