THE MICHIGAN DAILY I-hursday, February 7, 1 V71 I THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ehursday, February 7, 1 '~7A Group Flute Lessons Beginners can take advantage of our 6 week group flute course ... only $12.00 PrivateI nstruction Available For enrollment, call: 336 S. STATE - 769-4980 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Jerusalem the Golden: The historical, religious, and architecural signifi- cance of the eternal city in the traditions of Ju- daism, Christianity, and Islam, The Sacred Monu- fJerusalem THUR., FEB. ments of 8 p~m. AL ILLUSTRATED LECTURE" PROFESSOR OLEG GRABAR Professor of Art History, Harvard University Angell Hall-Auditorium B HOUSE VOTE: House grants subpoenapower Wage-price regulations I I ml i. I SPONSORED BY: PROGRAM IN JUDAIC STUDIES PROGRAM ON STUDIES IN RELIGION B'NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION I p Nixon (Continued from Page 1) the need for the committee to have such powers in order to conduct an investigation that could clear as jwell as implicate Nixon, many Re- publicans objected to some fea- tures of the resolution. Rep. Robert McClory (R-Ill.),l declaring that the impeachment in-! quiry will paralyze the govern- ment, said the resolution should! include an April 30 deadline for re- porting the Judiciary Committee's recommendation b a c k to the House. Rodino said he would do every- thing he could to meet that date but opposed fixing any rigid dead- line. His pledge won the backing of House Republican Leader John Rhodes of Arizona, and McClory's effort to write in the readline was defeated. escalates krs' strike 2,000 miners were reported away from work because they could not buy gasoline. Other coal mines in the Appalachian region were re- ported near a shutdown. In Nebraska, the state's one- house legislature voted yesterday to authorize a trip to Wasnington, and 37 of the state's 49 legislators' said they would go in an effort to talk to Nixon about the growing effects of the truckers' shutdown. A WWEEKLY LATE NIGHT PRESENTATION OF t ~FEATURE FILMS rn/1AAte -AaIV2 There was no immediate com- ment from the White House on the House action, which had been ex- pected. LAST WEEK, however, Nixon told Congress in his State of the Union address he will cooperate with the committee "in any way I consider consistent with my re-' sponsibilities to the office of the presidency of'the United States." He added that he would do noth- ing to weaken the office of the president or impair the ability of future presidents to make essen- tial decisions. IN OTHER Watergate - related developments, Nixon wrote a fed-' eral judge yesterday that disclos- ing conversations that are con- tained on five White House tape re-. cordings requested by the Senate Watergate committee "would not be in the national interest." In a letter to U. S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell, the President re- asserted his position that the Sen- ate committee should not get the five recordings, all of which con-1 tain conversations he had with ousted White House counsel John: Dean. "The Senate Select Committee has made known its intention to' make these materials public," the! President said in a letter that he signed personally. "Unlike the secret use of four out of five of these conversations before the grand jury, the publica-' tion of all these tapes to the world at large would seriously infringe upon the principle of confidential- ity, which is vital to the perform- ance of my constitutional responsi- bilities as president." to be lifted (Continued from Page 1) mire (D-Wis.) said it appeared "to have the force of a butterfly's hiccup." Biit no one on the subcommittee spoke out in favor of continuing wage and price controls in their present form. The nation's economy has oper- ated under some .form of direct wage and price controls since the Nixon administration's first price freeze in August 1971. Director John Dunlop of the Cost of Living Council said the admin- istration proposes to give the coun- cil new responsibilities to combat inflation. He said the council could serve to coordinate activities of other government agencies in attempt- ing to detect and solve problems of shortages and supply in the economy. He also said it could monitor the commitments made by industries, which have been decontrolled, to restrain prices and increase sup- ply, and could hold public hearings and require reports when it felt such action was necessary. A third major area of responsi- bility, he said, would be to im- prove methods of collective bar- gaining for wage negotiations. Sen. Adlai Stevenson (D-Ill.) questioned how the Cost of Living Council could obtain compliance from business and labor with its actions. "How will the Cost of Living Council jawbone with a toothless jawbone?" he asked. Dunlop said the effect of wage and price controls in controlling inflation has been minimal, except for some success in the health and construction industries. ,l a FRI DAY AN D SATURDAY NIGHTS ALL SEATS $1.50 THIS WEEK "Fellini's Roma" Violence, In trucke (Continued from Page 1) } end the strike which has idled many of the estimated 100,000 in- dependent drivers and kept a few of the Teamsters' 170,000 members off the road. One North Carolina hog slaught- ering company closed eight of its ten operations yesterday,aand the strike began to hit the coal mining industry. 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