Tuesday, December 9 1975 THE WICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, December 9, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Fighting Pike files contempt rages in charges in Congress (Continued from Page 1) U.S. attorney for prosecution. ity," said the letter from Moss. Albert refused to either back B e i*Moss' subcommittee ratified pike or oppose him but indi- the agreement with Morton in cated he woud not stand in the al Yahoud Jewish quarter to closed session yesterday after- way of a House contempt vote attack Falangists in shops and noon. if Pike asks for one. offices of the Storca Center. PIKE TOLD all 435 House "I have great respect for the Hand-to-hand fighting was re- members in a "Dear Colleague" secretary (Kissinger)c" Albert ported in progress at midnight. letter that contempt action secretr s " A ert aaia vicc..rra xxmr n told reporters. 4tI have great re- Only a few hundred Jews are left in the district, which was protected by Christian militia- men in previous rounds of fight- ing. The Jews have not been harmed by battling Moslems and Palestinians so far. Last month Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat personally arranged for food conveys to refugees trapped by fighting in a synagogue. In Washington, a State De- partment spokesman said no re- ports had been received of any' Jews being wounded. Them~ P-ad been an estimated 400-S00 Jews in Beirut, but many left be- cause of the frequent battles. The Moslems demand more political and economic power, which is now concentrated in the hands of the country's 40 per cent Christian minority. The Christians insist reforms can come only after the government clamps down on the Palestiman guerrillas. NEW VOCABULARY NEW YORK (AP) - Despite the fact that more food manu- facturers are adding nutrients to their products and using terms like "enriched," "restor- ed" or "fortified" on their food packages, the majority of shop- pers still don't know what these terms mean, according to John Gage, nutrition expert at Hoff- mann-La Roche, a vitamin sup- plier. agaist Kissinger wouiano "cause the earth to tremble nor the sun to stop in its tracks. "No one is seeking to place Mr. Kissinger in jail," Pike wrote fellow members, "andt the worst that can happen toi him is that he might have to provide the documents subpoe- naed to Congress" Ford's compromise offer was to identify to the House com- mittee all U.S. covert intelli- gence operations abroad since 1961 that were requested by thet State Department, rather thanj by intelligence agencies. BUT PIKE said that does not comply with the committee's subpoena for all State Depart- ment requests for information on all covert operations whether carried out or not., Pike said the State Depart-t ment originally told his com- mittee it requested five covert operations during the 14 years1 but said the department hast now found 25 requests for covert operations. Dropping two other contempt1 citations against Kissinger, Pike1 filed minutes after the House1 opened for business yesterday the one for Kissinger's refusal to turn over the State Depart- ment covert operation requests.t IT CHARGES Kissinger, withf "contumacious conduct," and ifc approved by the House wouldf direct Speaker Carl Albert toe turn the case over to the local spect for the committee I ap- pointed. I don't want to pre- judge." KISSINGER would say only that he will let the White House negotiate the matter. Pike dropped the oher two contempt citations against Kis- singer on grounds committee subpoenas have now been com- plied with and Kissinger is therefore no longer in contempt. They were for minutes of Na- tional Security Council appro- vals of reportedly more than 100 covert intelligence operations since 1965, and for U.S. intelli- gence estimates of Soviet com- pliance with arms agreements. FORD'S COMPROMISE offer, in effect, was to simply extend the covert operations approval decisions back to the 1961 date in the State Deparment sub- poena, and identify the opera- tions requested by the State De- partment. White House Counsel Philip Buchen told the committee in a letter dated Saturday that the President had authorized him to make that offer. "This additional step should, we believe, make it possible for the committee to obtain the in- formation that your letter indi- cated was necessary without af- fecting the President's claim of executive privilege," B u c h e n wrote. considers tie 4 with teachers union announcing the b (Continued from Page 1) the strike an dsubsequent legal of a new per cent, AFT 32.4 per cent and debts to pay-mainly because of ° AFSCME 30.6 per cent of the proceedings with the University. vote. Since AFSCME finished Arbitration cases also absorb last, it was eliminated and its a great deal of money. GEO has second choice votes redistnibut- agetda fmny E a claimed at times that the Uni- ed among the other two choices. versity is trying to bankrupt forit "nifiiain-osi. ta theingfiles a nue to gie rt in It was this redistribution that them by forcing all grievances. gave AFT the necessary marjor- into arbitration. Other observ- " ity-58 per cent to 42 per cent ers, however, have suggested for "no affiliation"-to win. that the union files a number of( unjustiifed grievances and takes Ithe university literary magazine Affiliation w i t h a national them all the way to arbitration union has been a concern of for th'e sake of ideological GEO ever since last year's purity. month-long strike. The union Supporters of affiliation hope O N SALE NOW , found itself at a disadvantage that the national union will because of its lack of organiza- agree to take over some of tionalOesfperience and fiancialGEOsdfinancial responsibilities. at ocal bookstores and the fishbowl resources. In addition, it is felt that the ALTHOUGH the union has re- support of a national union will ALTH he unin hase,1entqhold a greater weight in the _ __'_cdc* G tv_ cently passed a dues increase, uvnt f aothr srik. ________ ____ ___ _____________________________ '._.__ _. _______________________ ".. it remains in an unenviable po-w t a h rk sition. It still has considerable * NOT-SO-SWEET SNAILS Premiere Engagement SAN FRANCISO (AP)- The, The University of Michigan tI dangers of importin g illegal PROFESSIONAL THEATRE species of pets was demonstra- PROGRAM Presents ted in 1966 when a young tray-m- m m m .m mm mmm - mm mm. mm m mm mm m.w- mm mm mU - .mm m - m mmm m A t eler brought in a pair of Arfican The Kennedy Center - Xerxox r snails as pets. The result was Corporation American Bicen- disastrous. tennial Theatre L These snails can grow to the Jason Zoe r length of about one foot. 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