A Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 5, 1973 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 5, 1973 ,fm Boycott forces meat sales down, AP Photo T hieu Much! Vice President Spiro Agnew escorts President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam past an honor guard yesterday upon his arrival at Andrews Air Base near Washington. Thieu arrived from Cali- fornia after several days of talks with President Nixon. NOT LINKED TO CASE: Watergate committee says no' evidence on aide Halden By The Associated Press Farmers kept their cattle away from market and consumers kept their shopping carts away from the meat counter yesterday, the fourth day of the week-long meat boycott. A U.S. Department of Agricul- ture spokesman in Memphis, Tenn., said receipts were "well below normal for hogs and cattle"both; only, half as many cattle were de- livered to the Union Stock Yard in Portland, Ore., this Monday and Tuesday as were available the same days last week. Frank Register, executive direc- or of the National Association of Retail Grocers, said spot checks with members showed the average reduction in meat sales nationwide is 40 per cent. He said total sales are about the same, but meat spending has shift- ed . from red meat to poultry and fish. "At this time, the retail groc- er has no cause for alarm because the same amount of money is be- ing spent." Register said the boycott is ap- parently more effective in higher income areas. He said the, boycott apppeared most effective in Chi- sago and on the East and West coasts. He gave no data to sup- port his observations, but said his findings we~e based on spot checks made with members since the boy- cott began. A staff report of the 4 o i n t Economic Committee of Congress, predicted that grocery store prices would go up 10, per cent this year - and possibly morecunder certain circumstances. Thestudy, released by Sen. Hu- bert Humphrey, (D-Minn.), dis- agreed with a report of the Nixon administration's Cost of Living Council which said the rate of in- crease in food prices may be neari zero by the end of the year.1 Kroger Stores in the Roanoke,! Va., area advertised sirloin, T-bone and club steak at $1.49 a pound, compared to $1.89 in previous weeks, and ground beef at 89 cents compared to $1.09 earlier. A spokesman for the Virginia Citizens Consumer Council w a s optimistic about the long-range ef-, feet of the boycott. "We think the results will show that the boycott has been very effective," t h e spokesman said. In contrast, however, Joseph' Danzansky, president of Giant Food Stores, a Washington, D.C., retailer, said that although busi- ness in meat is down, prices won'tj necessarily be lowered. "We'll drop prices when prices drop for as," he said. A spokesman for Jewel F o o d Stores in Chicago said the chain's meat sales are down 15 per cent, but added: "Our concern right now is maintaining adequate supplies of meat because of reduced market- ing by packers and farmers." The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 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 mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreig). R. C. PLAYERS present THE THREE SISTERS by ANTON CHEKHOV Directed by DOUG SPRIGG APRIL 4-7 at 8:00 MATINEE: SATURDAY, APRIL 7 at 2:00 EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM. ADMISSION $1.25 Tickets on sale Tuesday, April 3 from 3:00-5:00 p.m. and one hour before each performance. featured in this month's * Playboy.t See it while z* g you can. z* plus ALL ABOUT SEX! r______ _330 f ~NE' NEW AT BIMBO'S NO COYER CHARGE MILO HIS GUITAR AND HEAD FULL OF COUNTRY MUSIC BIMBO'S 114 E. WASHINGTON BEER, WINE & COCKTAILS I_ THE E ENDS TODAY! Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 pm.* j a. WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Senator Sam Ervin, (D.N.C.) said yesterday his special Senate committee investigating the bug- ging of Democratic Party Head- quarters at the Watergate had so far received no evidence linking White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman with the incident. In a statement, Ervin said: "In the interest of fairness and jus- tice, the committee wishes to state publicly that, as of this time, it has received no evidence of any nature linking Mr. Hal- deman with any illegal activities in connection with the presiden- tial campaign of 1972." Republican Senator Lowell Weicker (R-Conn), a member of the committee, Tuesday called for Haldeman 's resignation, de- caring Haldeman clearly had to accept responsibility for a broad campaign of political espionage against the Democrats. Weicker said today he "con- curred" with the Ervin state- ment which his aides claimed was not inconsistent with Weic- ker's position. This was that the senator believed Haldeman should resign since he had over- all responsibility for a broad campaign of political espionage and that he should have known about it, because of his posi- tion in the White House. Attorney General Richard Kleindienst meanwhile promised today to conduct a thorough in- vestigation of the Watergate in- cident, including summoning White House aides before a fed- eral grand jury if evidence show- ed they were implicated. "I'm going to investigate this, no matter where chips may fall in the end," he told reporters. Sound System Problems? IN THE MARKET FOR NEW SOUND EQUIPMENT? OUR AD- VICE IS UNBIASED, PROFES- SIONAL AND FREE. We KNOW what CAN'T Be Repaired TAPE RECORDER SPECIALISTS INC. is the finest equipped Audio Service Company in Washtenaw County and we're located right here in Ann Arbor. Be it a tape recorder, amplifier, or a high quality FM tuner, you can ex- pect the best from TRS. For es- tablished quality repair service, backed by a full 90-day war- ranty, see us at 300 S. Thay- er St. in the Bell Tower Hotel across from the side of Hill Auditorium. OR CALL 663-4152 HELD OVER -STARTS TOMORROW! "Barbra Streisand gives the best performance of her career." -"UDIT"'CRiST, todA'yShow Senate fights Nixon impoundment powers WASHINGTON (R) - The Sen- ate moved toward action yester- day on a tough Democratic pack- age to put a ceiling on the federal budget and sharply restrict Presi-' dent Nixon's power to impound money appropriated by Congress. By 2 to 1 margins, the Senate defeated two Republican attempts to kill and water :down the im- poundment measure, sponsored by Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C.). The impoundment fight was only one of several amendments com- ing before the Senate on a bill which formally backs up the de- valuation of the dollar which went into effect in February. "This provides that Congress will retain the power of the purse," Ervin shouted to the Senate in de- fense of his impoundment amend- ment. Republicans said, however, the Senate was takipg away the Whie House's chief weapon to fight in- flation without putting anything in its place. Sen. John Tower (R-Tex.) said the bill has the effect of changing "the chief executive to the chief clerk." "This is a mandate to spend," said Tower, "without regard to ef- ficiency, common sense or econ- omy." Nixon wanted a ceiling on t h e budget but no restrictions for now on how to spend or cut federal pro- gram money. Ervin estimated that President Nixon has impounded a total of $12 billion in funds appropriated for highways, hospital building, health programs and other projects. INGMAR BERGMAN'S CRIESAND WHISPERS "A magnifi- cent, moving ®" and very mys- terious new film. It stands alone and it reduces almost everything else you're likely to see, this season to the size of a small cinder." --Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times . _ _. ...... . dr f presents THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH ORSON WELLES' CITIZEN, KANE The life and death of a great American newspaper magnate-a man with almost everything a person could want. Told with all the power, awesome- ness, and exuberance that film is capable of. Starring Welles, George Colorus, Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane, Dorothy Comingore. Thursday and Friday, April 5-6 THIS WEEKEND: UGETSU LIFE OF OHARU 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM $1.00 1 HOW THE WEST WAS WON! The myth and the truth, as seen by the men who civilized the West, and lived to regret it! "As ENTERTAININ as 'BUTCH CASSI DY' " -New York M IN THE LIFE AND NO SHORTS TIMES- OF Judge Bean starts promp I at 1 p.m.- I3 ,p.m.-5:05 7:05 & 9:10 I - --------- PRESENTS: URIAH HEEP WITH' rI SPECIAL GUEST STARS Billy Preston & McKendree Spring April 7, 8:00 P.M. at -f i- 7-Twm 7*W u~"1T V'WWW - --Ar W TAO1"W with and Cliff Potts - Ron Rifkin - Jesse Vint -The Drones Su9 ong s JOAN BAEZ n Conuctedby"*"PETER SCHICKELE Wrte DERIC WASHBURN & MIKE CIMINO and STEVE BOCHCO Ded b DOUGLAS TRUMBULL.- Producedby MICHAEL GRUSKOFF A MICHAEL GRUSKOFF/ DOUGLAS TRUMBULL PRODUCTION OIN~ AL SOUNDTACK ALBMA U NIIVERS~A L RELEASE a TECANIIC(M LOR IE[' Milk A1hUWI( I