Friday, August 3, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Friday, August 3, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Era this W An shutdi house beef a-nitma mark SON cludin stocki whole mayl beefv show brushf imxpro there Hamburger, stea By the Assni-ated Press faloes and horses by consumers and meat i steaks to hambargers, beef grew sellers. shorter in supply across the nation A survey found an overwhelming belief. veek. on the part of persons at all levels of the increasing number of layoffs and meat industry that the beef shortage will owns were reported at slaughter- get worse, and quickly. Many whole- s and wholesale houses dealing in salers who are still in business predict as cattlemen increasingly kept their that they won't be by next week if the ils in the pasture rather than the government's price freeze is not lifted. t place. In Washington. Treasury Secretary 4E HAMRURGER chain outlets in- Gzorge Shultz appeared before Congress' g Ohio Burger King were reported Joint Economic Committee and said it ng up on fish and hot dogs and two was still administration policy to leave salers predicted that steakhouses the freeze on beef prices intact until Sept. have to serve stew next week. One 12. Gerald Warren, the White House wholesaler told his 130 employes to deputy press secretary, echoed Shultz's up for work on Monday with paint comments. es--if they can't cut beef they can THE SENATE began a legislative at- we their working environment-and tempt to end the beef price freeze by were reports of purchases of buf- voting 84-5 yesterday to place beef under lk getting scarce the sae controls as all other foods. The of i3 slaughterhouses and packing plants measire now goes to the House. either shutting down or cutting back, and That action came a few hours after the reports of a dozen more such occurrences Labor :Department announced that the were received yesterday. wholesale price index had declined by 1.3 There were continuing reports of con- per cent in July, the steepest monthly drop sumers stocking tip on beef by buying in 26 years. The decline was led by farm in large quantities, and several areas products and processed food, which de- reported skyrocketing business in the sale creased 4.1 per cent, and it came during of home freezers. the period covered by the administration's "We are very concerned. It looks like it most recent price freeze. may be a meatless August," said Jack Kennedy, an official of Regional Asso- The Agriculture Department said that ciated Grocers. The Denver-based grocery during the first four days of this week store chain sent letters to all its stores there were 323,000 cattle slaughtered in in a six-state area, saying: federally inspected plants across the coon- "There is a distinct possibility that due try. That is 109,000 fewer than the number to the lack of available product and to for the same period last week and 146,000 fully comply with Phase 4 regulation, we fewer than the same period last year. will not be able to supply you with beef AS OF WEDNESDAY there were reports next week." Skylab rescue craft readied; mission hit with malfunctions Gainesville Eight U.S. District C osrt Jidge Winsion Arnow told the Gainesville (11orida) Eight con- spiracy trial defendants yesterday tha t he will hear evide se on whether FIl aents attemiptd to b g defense conferences or telphxme calls. 1h -1ve FBI agents w e r e diisve:)red with eleIctronic sxxrveillAnce uixin'.nt in tei clos Ilnext to the Ci - ference room for defe'se attorneys Tzes day night. Snven Vietnam Voterins Agiistl tlse Wx and ne syxxmxathizcr are -acused of plottixg dixruptis dui- the 1972 Pepbltixx N xtI Cxnxenxxxxx Alaskan pipeline Backers of the trns-Alaskan pipelisec scored a crucial ,thory last night xhen the House rejecitedi move to perinit e- vironriental lwsuits against the project. The 221 to 198 rote cane after President Nixon threw his suport behind a featre of the bill designed to sidestep such suits. Bombing hearing Supreme Court Justice William Douglas will hold a hearing this norning in the court fight to stop U.S. bombing of Cam- bodia, according to the office of Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman (D N.Y.). Douglas is the second justice to hear a request to overturn a stay on a lower court ruling which found the bombing unconstitutional. On Wednesday, Justice Thurgood M a r- shall refused to reinstate the lower court ruling. Hanoi aid A broad outline has been framed by U.S. and North Vietnamese negotiators on eco- nomic aid for Hanoi, but American offic- ials yesterday denied a formal agree- ment had been reached. U.S. negotiators affirmed that the main roadblock to an agreement remains the continued fighting in Cambodia. Happenings.. . . . . are more varied than the usual summer evening. Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" continues at the Power Center at 8. For a fun way to get some exercise, try international folk dancing from 8-11 in the WAB - in- struction is from 8-9 if you have two left feet. And of course there are the movies . . . "Concert for Bangladesh" will be shown in Aud. A of Angell Hall at 8 and 10 .. . . "Myra Breckenridge" in Nat. Sci. Aud. at 8 and to . . . Wyler's "Dead End" in the Arch Aud also at 8 and 10. A2"s weather Today's skies will be mostly s u n n y with a high near 80. It should continue clear and a little warmer on Saturday. SPACE CENTER, louston( x'--Prepara- tion of a rescue shipl for the Skylab 2 astronauts started resterday as a "pru- dent" measure after a very serious prob- lem developed, space officials said. Un- less nore troable occurs, the record 59- day mission will cxx'xtinue normally. "We agree 100 per cent with what you've Just announced" said Skylab 2 command- er Alan Bean after being told of the de- cision. "Everybodr's happy tp here." JOHNSON SPACE Center Director Dr. Christopher Krtift tald the astronauts "we feel fairly confident" despite a failure which has caused half of a rocket s-stem aboard the Apollo corxmand ship t be shut down. ixI"To be prudent, however," Kraft sid, axxxl.lcrted prepartion for xlaunclh Ixs slix on the Skylab 3 ricket and Apollo craft which can be used to rescue th:' x Iof Skylxih 2. Skylab 2 aslrnauts, lan, lr. cwen Garriott and JTrack Loxsma were in nix itmmediate danger and continued experi- ients aboard the orbiting laboratory. 5BUT EXPERTS worried about possible failure of two jet engines identical to two others which failed earlier. The problem is in two of fsx ir rocket propulsion systems which steer the Apollo command ship-tthe craft which ferries the w - astronauts between earth and the Skyiab space station orbiifing at 271 miles. Th Apollo craft is docked at one end of te Skylab. One of the rocket systems develoned a leak yesterday morning and had to be turned off. A leak earlier knocked out another of the thrusters, leaving only twa rocket steering systems in operation. AP Photo "WE FEEL fairly confident that we've Cable car anniversary got two rocket systems for attitude con- Mayor Joseph Alioto, left, waves to the crowd early yesterday as he takes part trol should we have a problem with any- in the 100th birthday reenactment of the first cable car trip down Nob Hill in thing that would result in an immediate San Francisco. See SKYLAB, Page 10 STEPHENSON, 41 OTHERS Delhey cites vote law violators By JACK KROST County Prosecutor William Delhey yes- terday cited Mayor James Stephenson and 41 other local ex-candidates for fail- ure to file detailed lists of campaign con- tributors as specified in the Fair Elec- tions Act, Also named as potential election law of- fenders were State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), Washtenaw County Sher- iff Fred Postill, GOP Congressman Mar- vin Esch, City Council members Carol Jones (D-Second Ward) and Norris Thom- as (D-First Ward), and County Com- missioners Elizabeth Taylor and Kath- leen Fojtik, both Democrats. IN A MEETING yesterday with repre- sentatives of Washtenaw County's four political parties, Delhey listed 57 instances of improper filing by candidates in the last four local elections, starting with the Au- gust 1972 primary races. The list included 34 possible offenses by Democratic candidates, 19 by Republi- cans, 2 by Human Rights Party members, and one by American Independent Party sheriff candidate Douglas Harvey. Delhey gave the 42 candidates until Sep- tember 6 to "clarify" their lists of con- tributors. The elections act carries a pen- alty of up to five years in jail and/or a $1000 fine. THE ACT stipulates that office-seekers must file returns specifically listing con- tributions, sources, and the amounts con- tributed. But Delhey did not specify what action would be taken if the candidates failed to . file proper lists of contributions and con- tributors by the deadline, saying only, "We'll have to cross that bridge when we come to it." The prosecutor said many of the candi- dates had filed overly ambiguous returns, listing non-political organizations with no members named, or crediting "miscel- laneous" or "anonymous" sources, a- di- rect violation of the election law BUT DELHEY stressed that in his opin- ion, the offenders had not acted out of criminal intent. "It would appear that the people who didn't file, or didn't file properly, did it because of ignorance or stupidity," he said yesterday. He further explained that he was not issuing an ultimatum, to tha four politi- cal parties' representatives, noting, "1'm not on a witch-hunting expedition."