Tuesday, October 23, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pni tm Tk roj I rage i nree ' Cox firing halts non-Wal WASHINGTON (IP) - Presi- dent Nixon's firing of Archibald Cox blocked, at least temporar- ily the search for White House records that could prove vital to non-Watergate investigations including the ITT and milk-price cases. Dissolution of the special pro- secutor's office also leaves an uncertain future for probes into a $100,000 contribution from bil- lionaire Howard Hughes to Nix- on's friend C. G. "Bebe" Re- bozo, illegal corporate donations to the President's re-election campaign and alleged presiden- tial involvement in the 1971 Ells- berg burglary. WHITE H 0 U S E spokesman Ronald L. Zielger has promised that the Justice Department will carry out these investigations "with thoroughness and vigor" despite the sacking of Cox and departure of the department's two top officials. Documents already disclosed by the Senate Watergate commit- tee and other sources point to critical material apparently still locked in the basement of the Executive Office Building. But the conditions Nixon set when he agreed to release some material from the Watergate tape recordings could cut off ac- cess to all White House Water- gate and non-Watergate papers. The court order he has refused to comply with would have forc- ed him to surrender documents as well as the more celebrated tapes. ergate tial conversations." In return for the tape summary, he said, "it would, be understood that there would be no further at- tempt by the special prosecutor to subpoena still more tapes or other presidential papers of a similar nature." Cox said one of his chief rea- sons for rejecting the deal was the ban on further document- hunting. Some of the papers he is known or believed to have wanted are: -ITT: In a memorandum from Charles Colson to H. R. Halde- man on March 30, 1972, Colson listed a series of memos he said could be damaging if they were discovered. One from John Ehrlichman to John Mitchell on May 5, 1971,al- luded to discussions with the President as to the "agreed upon ends" in the resolution of the In- ternational Telephone & Tele- graph Corp. antitrust case, Col- son said. Another went diectly to the President. HE SAID this memo would show that the Justice Depart- ment knew ITT planned to give money to the Republican National Convention before the depart- ment settled its antitrust case against the giant conglomerate. -MILK FUND: The milk pro- ducers lobby sent Nixon a letter on Dec. 16, 1971, discussing the industry's problems with price controls and mentioning it was about to start contributing $2 mil- lion to the President's re-election campaign, according to investi- gative sources. Three months later, on March 23, 1971, Nixon met personally at the White House with more than a dozen dairy industry lobbyists. Also present was the then-secre- tary of agriculture, Clifford Har- din. Two days after the meeting Hardin reversed an earlier deci- sion andannounced an increase in federal milk price supports of _._._ _ r r- - - 27 cases 27 cents a hundredweight, esti- mated to be worth as much as $700 million in added income to d'airymen. A DAY before the White House meeting, secret contributions be- gan to flow into a flock of dum- my campaign committees and from there into the Nixon cam- paign. A total of $422,500 was eventually contributed by three dairy co-operatives. UilE MICHIGAN DAILY Vol. LXXXIV, No. 41 Tuesday, October 23, 1973 is edited and managed by students atI the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning durin the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus' area );.$650 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign). rf NASSAU MASS MEET!ING MARKLEY HALL: Lounge 4 Tues., Oct. 23 ti 1 UNION: Assembly Hall Wednesday, Oct. 24 7:00 P.M. FREE FILM & FUN BOTH NITES!!! Call U.A.C. Travel for details j' -2 i MUSKET Gypsy and an Original Musical CENTRAL COMMITTEE APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED OCT. 23-OCT. 30 Peck up applications 2nd floor Union in\ UAC office $( FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 763-1 107 0 I Order I TICKETS NOW ON SALE ! . Your Subscription A MAN WEARING a Nixon mas I White House yesterday, waving President's impeachment. AP Photo NIXON DIRECTED Cox "to k and striped pajamas stands with a group of protesters outside the make no further attempts by ju- his sign at passing cars and encouraging them to honk for the dicial process to obtain tapes, notes or memoranda of presiden- Today iHE NEW PHOENIX" REPERTORY W COaMNY T. EdwardHombietonMichaelMonteI.Monoging Directors-HroldPrince.StephenPorter;ArticDirectors WORLD FAMOUS MUSICIAN: Cellis SAN JUAN (Reuter) - Cellist Pablo Casals, hailed as one of this century's greatest musicians, died yesterday after a brief ill- ness. He was 96. His 36-year-old wife, Martita, was at his side when he diedl at 2:05 p.m. THE WORLD-renowned musi,: ian had been in th'e hospital since his heart attack last Tuesday and spent the week in a "highly crit- ical" condition, rallied during the weekend and finally succumb- ed today of lung and heart corn- plications. Ms. Casals said the body would be taken to their home anJ only members of Casals' family and close personal friends would be permitted to enter the house dur- ing the mourning period. Casals, whose full name w a s Pau -(he- preferred this Catalan version of Pablo) Carlos Salva- dor DeFillb De Casals, was born in the Catalan village of Ven- drell on Dec. 29, 1876, the second of 11 children of the local or- ganist, Carlos Casals. HE LEARNED at a very early age to play the piano, violin, organ, and to compose. He heard a cello for the first time when he was 11 and declared at once that this was the instrument he wish- ed to play. Soon ofter that his mother Pilar Pablo Casals dies took him to Barcelona and enter- ed him at the Municipal School of Music where he was to study for five years, supporting him- self by playing in a cafe. He studied in Madrid and Brus- sels then went to Paris where he played cello in music halls to eke out a precarious living, supporting his mother and two small brothers who accompanied him on his travels. HE RETURNED to Barcelona, teaching and playing at the Bar- celona opera. Casals gave con- certs, made his Paris debut as a soloist with the Charles Lamour- eux Orchestra in 1899, andesoon found, himself in demand in Eur- ope and America. When the Spanish Civil War broke out Casals put his talent at the service of the Republicans and after the victory of the Franco regime he went into self- imposed exile, first in France, and later in Puerto Rico, h i s mothers home. In December, 1966, when Cas- als celebrated his 90th birthday, distinguished musicians and oth- ers visited him in San Juan. They were surprised at the vig- our of a man who had learned to play the piano at four years of age, the violin at seven! and the organ at nine. CASALS, who almost to his death began each day by play- ing two Bach preludes and fugues on the piano before taking a stroll on the beach, used to say that from his earliest years music was "as natural as breath- ing." Along with a lifelong love of music Casals had conducted a personal world peace crusade since 1962. "I am a man first, an artist second," he said in a book about I I I r EMU Maj"or Events Committee with WWWW presents AMERICA i November 9 Bowen Fieldhouse Tickets: $3; $4, $5-reserved AVAILABLE AT: Ann Arbor Music Mart, Huckleberry Pa rt y Store, J.L. Hudson's. McKenny Union. r NO ALFRED HITCHCOCK BLACKMAIL HITCHCOCK has the knack of putting ordi- nary people into complex situations and then letting them make their own way out of the maze. This 1929 film, his first talkie, is no exception SHORT: ZAGREB BITS II WED.: OUR DAILY BREAD ARCHITECTURE AUD. CINEMA GUILD Tonight at 7 and 9:05 Adm. $1 ISRAEL needs you 0 Samuel Beckett's * evening, an a for half-tramp, half-cl * who has, they bel at the rendezvous Godot's gratitude * whether they have * v - - - w w ___ .-.____ . - - - - - --'___. _ ..m..__ __._.__. xx. c c. c.Y NEW WORLD FILM COOP presents AMUEL BECKETT'S TING FOR GODOT - 'T second work filmed from the stage play. One nely country road near a tree, two elderly men, lown, are waiting for someone of the name Godot leve, given them to understand that their patience will be rewarded. The two are not sure what form will take, anymore than they know for certain e come to the right place on the appointed day. 'TT ' .' "k 9' BENEFIT CONCERT This Ann Arbor community is invited to attend a benefit concert. All proceeds are earmarked for non - military essential services for the state of Israel. LOUIS NAGEL, pianist B.S., M.S., Ph.D. The Juilliard School member, piano faculty, University of Michigan School of Music . JULIE NAGEL, assisting artist B.S., M.S. The Juilliard School Michigan League Ballroom October 24, 1973-8:00 P.m. NAMEI ADDRESS -___ _ TICKETS TOTAL . I at $2.25 (buys 2 sterilized dressings)I :1 -' '"