THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIlI, No. 52-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, August 1, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Erv'in termns tape talk counterfeit evidence Suggests White House complicity Senator am Nixon meat order nixed by supplier WASHINGTON (A') - "If Mrs. Housewife feels the meat shortage, so should the White House," says Bernard Goldstein. "They started the shortage and . . . don't deserve any better treatment than anyone else." With that he rejected an order from the White House for 15 pounds of filet mignon and New York strip steak. GOLDSTEIN IS president of District Hotel Supply, Inc., the largest hotel and restaurant meat supplier in the District of Columbia. At the White House Tuesday, Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren con- firmed the order had been rejected. He added: "We are shopping elsewhere to fill out the normal replenishment. We are in the same position as anyone else we are buying where we can." "We've been supplying the White House with meat for 16 years and this is the first time we've ever refused them," said Goldstein. GOLDSTEIN SAID he offered I o w e r quality steak but was told no thanks. "I had no trouble filling their ground beef order," he added with a smile. "We're talking principle here," he went' on. "I realize I'm sticking my neck out - I may even lose the accounth- hut I feel I have to do something to help the meat industry. "I had an order from the No. 1 house- hold in the world and I had to say no. I told them to take filet mignon off the menu until the freeze is over." THE FREEZE on beef prices is sched- See BERNIE'S, Page 6 WASHINGTON (A) - Senate Wat- ergate Chairman Sam Ervin (D.- N.C.) accused the White House yes- terday of ordering H. R. Haldeman to reveal his interpretation of dis- puted tape recordings which Presi- dent Nixon has refused to make public. The former presidential chief of staff denied the charge and said in answer to a question that he would welcome the opportunity to play the tapes to the committee "because they would confirm what I told you." "I think this is counterfeit evidence," said Ervin as the committee heard again from Haldeman how he listened to record- ings of two key meetings between Nixon and John Dean, the ousted White House counsel who has accused Nixon in the Watergate cover-up. ERVIN SAID: "I would say the clear in- dication is that the White House counsel ordered Mr. Haldeman to reveal his inter- pretation of the tapes to the public . .. "The facts are that the President of the United States stated on July 23rd he had sole control of the tapes and none would be published. Now the man closest to him appears the next week and puts his interpretation of them into evidence." Haldeman startled the committee Mon- day when he said he listened in late April to the recording of a March 21, 1973, meet- ing between Dean and Nixon, and then lis- tened just three weeks ago to the tape of a Sept. 15, 1972, meeting. HALDEMAN DISCLOSED yesterday that he was also given additional tapes in July to take home, but said he did not listen to them since he had not attended the meet- ings recorded on the tapes by the recently disclosed White House sound system: The Senate panel, the Watergate special prosecutor and Nixon have battled for possession of the tapes since a former See ERVIN, Page 6 AP Photo H. R. Haldeman pauses to relieve a second day itch during his testimony before the Watergate Committee yesterday. UFW SUPPORT ACTION A&P pickets still marching By REBECCA WARNER "Please don't shop here. You're hurting some of the poorest people in the country by shopping A&P." It is a typical wet gray Ann Arbor Thursday at the Maple Village shopping center. As 2:30 approaches, two picketers begin their mild-mannered vigil in front of one of the city's four A&P stores. "DO YOU HAVE a minute for me to e x p 1 a i n something very important to farm workers?" asks the leafleter, stand- ing politely out of the path to the store's automatic doors. Since January, representatives of the Ann Arbor United Farm Workers (UFW) Boycott Committee have picketed outside the city's A&P stores. Organizers say that while initial effects at any store are minimal, a few weeks of picketing yield encouraging results. At the store on Stadium and Industrial High- way, picketers said Thursday they were turning away an average of three out of ten prospective customers. Business at the Huron Street store during picketing hours has been slowed to an almost impercep- tible trickle. THE BOYCOTT of A&P stores was set by UFW leadership to increase the im- pact of grape and lettuce consumer boy- cotts. A&P, the nation's largest grocery chain, handles more than four million heads of lettuce per week. "Once enough of A&P decides to go clean, that's the final push to the growers to recognize the farm workers' strike," says one spokes- man. The A&P boycott has grown in impor- tance this summer as grape harvesting contracts formerly held by the UFW come up for renewal. Many growers have signed with the Teamsters Union rather than the UFW, in what UFW leaders describe as a payoff of corrupt Teamster officials. Thursday' afternoon the picketers find Maple Village shopping center as placidly See LOCAL, Page 10