Panel seeks new tape WASHINGTON 0P) - The House Judiciary Commit- tee plans to subpoena the tape of a pre-Watergate White House meeting to see if President Nixon had ad- vance knowledge of the plan to bug Democratic head- quarters. The tape of the April 4, 1972 meeting, which the White House has refused to deliver, is needed to plug a gap in the evidence relating to that question, one of the allegations under investigation in the committee's im- peachment inquiry. THE MEETING between Nixon, his former chief of staff, Ii. R. Haldeman, and former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell took place four days after Nixon's re-election campaign aides had approved a plan for electronic surveillance of the Democrats. The President has stated repeatedly that he first learned of the involvement of his aides in the Water- gate break-in nearly a year later, on March 21, 1973. The missing link in the chain of evidence being pre- sented to the committee was pointed out Thursday by chief counsel John Doar, who said he would request a subpoena*at the committee's next business session. THE TAPE is one of 76 dealing with Watergate that the committee requested last April 19. Earlier this week, the White House said no more Watergate mater- ial would be surrendered. Instead of issuing a blanket subpoena for all 76 tapes, the committee plans to see how the missing material affects the case as it is being presented and then sub- poena the tapes it feels are vitally needed. The announced refusal of the White House to deliver any more Watergate material could lead to a consti- tutional confrontation if a subpoena is issued. But the committee's present intention is to take any unanswer- ed subpoenas into consideration when it votes on ar- ticles of impeachment, rather than seek to enforce them. THE APRIL 4 tape assupies importance because of the testimony of Jeb Stuart Magruder, former deputy director of Nixon's re-election campaign committee, who has pleaded guilty to a charge of obstructing jus- tice. Magruder said the plan to bug Nixon's political op- ponents and the Democratic national headquarters was approved March 30, 1972, and that Haldeman's chief aide, Gordon Strachan, was so informed in a memo- randum. Strachan, who is awaiting trial on charges of con- spiracy and obstruction of justice, has testified he men- tioned the plan in a paper prepared for Haldeman to See JUDICIARY, Page 11 THE Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 4-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, May 11, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Govt. upset widespread POMPIDOU:,The end of Gaullism? BRANDT: Detente threatened? TRUDEAU: Economic difficulties Inflation causes internationa distress By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press The year isn't half over and already it's made its mark in history by producing a startling epidemic of falling governments that presages agonizing uncertain- ties for the months ahead. Only this week West Germany, Canada and Iceland joined an ever-growing Political Uproar Club wherein any leader in trouble finds he has lots of company. FRANCE, about to shed its Gaullist shell after 15 years ... England ... West Germany ... India .. . Australia . .. almost any place one looks in the de- veloped world, government leaders are experiencing the sharp pain of political hot water. Inflation and its spinoff of economic and political problems are behind a huge share of the advanced world's common difficulties. The universality of the trouble and a look of widespread instability in the non- communist world might leave a surface impression that the communist nations are the only ones who now enjoy political peace. Still, when it comes to trouble, they manage to gather their share. CHINA HAS its :-esurgent cultural revolution. The Soviet Union has political and economic jitters as it worries about a shakily based foreign policy. Canada's Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau fell this week because of economic difficulties, and the nation must have a general election July 8. West Germany is in a dither over Chancellor Willy Brandt's resignation, because he unwittingly had a Communist spy in his office, and the scandal has re- percussions that echo in Washington and Moscow and may place the fate of the East - West detente in the balance. UNCERTAINTY radiates from West G e r m a n y through the European Common Market, already bur- dened with more than enough of that commodity. Some of the uncertainty comes from France, Europe's key- stone, after President Georges Pompidou's death. Wait- See GOVTS., Page 1