THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 26-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, June 14, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages N xon orders 60 day freeze on retaf Move won't directly a ffe pr ces pct wages WASHINGTON UP--President Nix- on last night moved to stop inflation and spiralling living costs by order- ing an immediate freeze on all re- tail prices for a maximum period of 60 days. Declaring that "prices are going up at unacceptably high rates," Nixon outlined a price ceiling which forbids retailers from charging high- er than the maximum prices in effect during the June 1-8 period. THE ANNOUNCED freeze follows Nix- on's declaration last week that inflation was the biggest issue facing the nation. Many' commentators have noted that the President's economic efforts are, at least in part, an attempt to draw popular attention away from the continuing Water- gate scandal. The new freeze does not directly affect wages and will extend throughout the marketing system with an exemption only for raw agricultural products. Nixon announced the move in a nation- wide television-radio address. THE FREEZE PERIOD, he said "will be used to develop and put into place a new and more effective system of con- trols which . . . will involve tighter standards and more mandatory compli- ance programs than under Phase III." The Phase 3 program, which contained voluntary enforcement provisions, came after a 90-day across-the-board wage-price freeze in summer, 1971, and a 14-month program of Phase II wage-price guide- lines which expired in January. Nixon called on Congress "on an ur- gent basis" to grant him new and flex- ible authority to impose export controls, particularly on food products whose prices might be pushed upward by foreign de- mand in this year of poor growing con- ditions in much of the world. "WE WILL NOT let foreign sales price meat and eggs off the American table," Nixon declared. "In allocating the pro- ducts of America's farms between mar- kets abroad and those in the United States, we must put the American con- sumer first." See NIXON, Page 10 New Viet pa ct signed in Paris Outreach' holds dance at Maxey Training School By GORDON ATCHESON and DAN BIDDLE Special To The Daily WHITMORE LAKE-At first glance, it seemed just about like any other high school social event. The dance was held in the gym. The stereo system blasted out soul music. The girls congregated on one side of the floor and the boys on the other. Still something felt different. Perhaps . the school's name lent a foreboding air. Maxey _Boys Training School is euphemistically called a re- socialization center-a reformatory for juvenile delinquents. The school's "residents" are all teen- agers. But the common denominator is their criminal records. They have been convicted of offenses r a n g i n g from truancy to violent street crimes. Last night's dance was one of a very few chances Maxey's students have had to mix socially with girls their own age. The University's Project Outreach sponsored the dance and recruited the young maidens from Pioneer, Commu- nity, and Willow Run high schools. One Community High girl said she volunteered "just because I thought it would be, well, sort of a different trip." Some of the Maxey boys had the worn faces of older men and some seemed much too young to be in any place like Maxey. They were, at first, united in their shyness. But after half an hour, nearly every- one had taken a turn at dancing. "Come on now, you all," said the kid at the mike. "Get out there oh the floor. We don't get to do this often." And he put on a Billy Preston record: "I've got a d a n c e, ain't got no steps .." But the five girls dancing in the doorway moved into the gym with per- fect steps, bobbing their heads and weaving their arms like basketball play- ers faking toward the basket. Outreach, which has w o r k e d at Maxey for more than a year, hoped the dance would provide an opportunity for the boys "to relax under more honest conditions than they usually ex- perience." One Maxey student thought aloud, "You know, it's kids that understand each other best. But maybe we can get a live band next time." Maybe. Story on Page 3