gage Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Friday, une 15, 1973 Reaction unfavorable to Nixon's By The AP and UP1 On balance, reaction - to Phase 4 - President Nixon's 60-day pricefreeze - was sharply criti- cal yesterday. Labor leaders, politicians and economists were virtually unanimous in their skepticism concerning the Presi- dent's new economic initiatives. Two basic themes were heard repeatedly in reaction to the new policy: -It was too late. Many said if the President had acted earlier, the freeze would have had a better chance of working, and -It will be a disaster for food american !UUlW17 276 pages of the best new reading in America today " MALCOLM LOWRY, Ghostkeeper " PHILIP ROTH, Looking at Kafka " HAROLD BRODKEY, Play " JOHN SCHAAR, The Case For Patriotism " RICHARD HOWARD, Oscar Wilde Visits Walt Whitman " RICHARD GILMAN, Peter Handke " REYNOLDS PRICE, At The Gait " MARK STRAND, Inside The Sory " and many others NOW ON SALE also available by subscription - pBantam Books 666 Fifth Ave., New York 10019 economic plans prices. The fear is being widely expressed that controls on retail and wholesale food prices with- out corresponding controls on un- processed food could result in ar- tificial shortages. "THE PRESIDENT waited too long to do something," accord- ing to University economist Gardner Ackley. "Some action should have been taken soon after the first of the year" "Too little, too late, too com- plicated, too political," said econ- omist Eliot Janeway. United Steel Workers President I. W. Abel agreed. "I for one think there should have been action earlier" tN EUROPE, reaction of gold dealers echoed the theme. While the dollar started out strongly, by mid-morning yes- terday it was beginning to slump. Most experts agreed the reason for the poor performance is a continuing lack of faith in the U. S. economy. "NIXON'S FREEZE was too little too late," one London gold dealer said. "And, there is still Watergate and the question of whether he has the long-term au- thority to set the American econ- omy straight" For economists and labor lead- ers as well, food prices were a major area of concern. United AutodWorkers President Leonard Woodcock blasted the Nixon move as "a retreat from Phase 3" which "will not solve the nation's problems" "A PRICE FREEZE on food at the wholesale and retail level will only create artificial short- ages and black market prices," he said. In a similar vein, Barney - Weeks - president of the Ala- bama Labor Council, AFL-CIO,- asked, "How long can you freeze grocery prices while unprocessed farm goods are going up?" H e n d r i k Houthakker - an economist at Harvard - com- plained that the program was too superficial, that the President "has not come to any firm view as to what is necessary." HOUTHAKKER SAID he was disappointed that the President did not come up with structural changes for the economy, espe- cially in the area of farm policy. "It doesn't seem to me like a very serious- effort," economist John Kenneth Galbraith com- mented. Reaction from Capitol Hill was predictable. HOUSE GOP Leader Gerald - Ford called the move, "right on target," while House Speaker -n Carl Albert (D-Oklahoma) said it - was "not broad enough" AP Photo In sum, almost no one of any PRESIDENT NIXON poses for pictures Wednesday night after importance was standing up and delivering a nationwide television address on the economy. His cheering yesterday in the wake measure for dealing with inflation - a 60-day price freeze - met of the Nixon announcement. with unfavorable comment from labor leaders and economists. Nixon move reflects aiure .t of voluntary price ARE YOU COLOR BLIND? We Need You For Color Vision Experiments WE PAY CALL Fred, 764-0574 Atounding!. -- -- - - - By BILL NEWKIRK WASHINGTON - In freezing prices for up to 60 days, Presi- dent Nixon may have permanent- ly etched wage-price controls in- to the U. S. economy, a result he deeply wants to avoid. The President admitted the failure of his largely voluntary Phase 3 program, the system of wage - price restraints he de- vised as a transition to a free economy. B U T RUNAWAY inflation changed his plans. Nixon chose the strongest option before him, a new price freeze, and said it would be followed by a tough, new mandatory system of wage- price controls to be known as Phase 4. In announcing his new program Wednesday night, Nixon was haunted by his words of assur- ance about the economy only a few months ago. When he dumped the manda- tory wage - price- control sys- tem, in favor of Phase 3 on Jan. 11, Nixon said his move [U -M UNION Billiards & Bowling Open 'til 1 a.m. Fri. & Sat. could "mean ever greater price stability with less restrictive bureaucracy." HE P R E D I C T E D Phase 3 would hasten the return of the nation's free-market sys- tem. But inflation exploded in the first four months of the year. Consumer prices rose at an an- nual rate of 9.2 per cent. Food prices alone went up at an an- nual rate of 25.4 per cent. "Everybody admits Phase 3 was a failure," Treasury Secre- tary George Shultz told news- men. "Let's not argue about that." NIXON SOUGHT to assure the American people that the tough new controls that will be upcom- ing "will not be designed to get us permanently into a controlled economy" That was also the purpose of Phase 3. Nixon began his experiment with wage - price controls, on Aug. 15, 1971, freezing wages, prices and rents for 90 days. That was followed by a 14-month Phase 2 system of mandatory controls, a span when the rate of inflation was cut significantly. T H E ADMINISTRATION'S experience with controls has shown how difficult it is to get rid of them once they are in place. Before Nixon imposed controls in 1971, the economy was plftgued with the worst of both controls worlds, high inflation and high unemployment - the situation known as "stagflation." the rise in prices had become more im- mune to the traditional inflation- fighters, tight money and tight spending practices by the gov- ernment. Shultz conceded there will be a large increase in the federal bu- reaucracy once Phase 4 is insti- tuted. He didn't say how many people will be added, but it is clear that much-tighter enforce- ment is expected. THE SUCCESS of Nixon's freeze on food prices depends heavily on a related action, his request to Congress to give him the power to control exports or such agricultural products as feed grains. Shultz said it "will be very difficult" to hold down food prices if Congress fails to pass export controls. If the freeze holds the domestic price of food below the higher world-market price, "then all our commodities would go abroad," he said. That would dry up supplies in the United States, he indicated, and would defeat the purpose of the freeze. NIXON'S DECISION repre- sented a triumph for former Treasury Secretary John Con- nally, who had urged strong ac- tion, over milder proposals urged by Shultz and Herbert Stein, chairman of the Council of Eco- nomic Advisers. cinema guild PRESENTS Alfred Hitchcock's NOTORIOUS One of the master's great films With CARY GRANT, INGRID BERGMAN, CLAUDE RAINS TONIGHT-JUNE 15 8 and 10 p.m.' Architecture Auditorium $1.00