Friday, November 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three~ Friday, November 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three, Connally denies pay-off Middle East POW 1 Md WASHINGTON (P) - F o r m e r had consistently refused to involve Treasury Secretary John Connally himself with partisan politics, denied emphatically last night that In other Watergate-related de- he ever accepted money for his velopments: help in arranging higher federal ! At the Senate Watergate hear- support prices for the nation's ing, George Spater, former head: dairy industry. of American Airilnes, said he illeg- Connally emerged from a closed- ally gave $55,000 in corporate funds door interrogation session with Sen- to Nixon's 1972 campaign because ate Watergate committee lawyers he was afraid not to. But Russell and told reporters, "anyone that De Young, a Goodyear Tire and supposes he was present when I Rubber Co. executive, said his received a payment is a categori- company illegally gave $40,000 to cal liar." Nixon without pressure because it { thought-Nixon's re-election was in, Nixon's past practice of tape re- - x cording conversations without tell- eX C n a n eit ing the other party about it. Ford appeared before the House Judi- (Continued from Page 1) but tl ciary Committee considering his Maj. Gen. Mohamed Abdel Ghirni town nomination. El-Gamazi and Maj. Gen. Ahron railwE t The International Executive Yariv, the Egyptian and Israeli Board of The Newspaper Guild, an signatories of the six-point cease- THI AFL-CIO affiliate, passed a reso- fire agreement, at Kilometer 101 tians lution calling on Congress to in- to exchange views on the situation. hours itiate impeachment proceedings HE GAVE NO further details not t against Nixon "without further de- ! and said the next official meeting in ac lay." The guild is the union for between the two sides would be The editorial, commercial and some held next week. estim other workers in newspapers, news Meanwhile, the strength of the of Su services, magazines and related United Nations' peacekeeping force water media in the United States, Canada near the Suez Canal and Cairo had the fi and Puerto Rico. reached 2,011 officers and men, the 6. Th UN announced. the s UN officials in Cairo said yes- Egy -r ~~~~~~terday that about 1,200 wounded raeli X n ikwudhvsob vci n i Say Nixon and sickhwould have,2o0be evazu- ing f ated from Suez town. They said I say t lethe Egyptian government would;Ions so n1 lie likse to send in a hospital train, town. acuerway :hat Israeli troops around the have removed some of the ay tracks. [E OFFICIALS said the Egyp- could repair the track within if the Israelis allowed it. If he injured will be brought out convoy of ambulances. officials reported that the ated 20,000 civilian population uez town had suffered food, and power shortages since ghting which erupted on Ot. e most serious problem was hortage of water. yptian officials claim the Is- turned off the pipeline bring- resh water from Cairo, and he Israelis also blew u py- bringing electricity to the The Bagels for Brunch Bunch PRESENTS Lox, Bagels & Cream Cheese SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18 11 A.M. H I LLEL--1429 Hill St. THOSE MAKING such charges are operating out of motives that are "neither good nor fair but vi- cious," Connally said. Connally, who said he does not expect to be called as a witness when the committee opens public " hearings into the so-called milk deal later this month, acknowl- edged he had favored higher dairy prices. Connally said the committe law- yers questioned him about publish- ed reports, denied by Connally, that he received $15,000 for his role in the decision to approve higher price supports. HE SAID HIS position was in no way related or linked to large con- tributions from the dairy industry to President Nixon's re-election campaign. He did say, however, that he was told in 1971 by Jake Jacobson, then the attorney for the Texas- based American Milke Producers, Inc., that $10,000 was available for contributions to the Nixon cam- paign next year. Connally said Jacobson, a for-1 mer White .House staff member,j offered to allow him to designatel where the funds should go, "but I said I did not want to do so be- cause I was a Democrat in a Re- publican administration." the best interest of the country. * Vice President-designate Ger- ald Ford said he disagrees with Senators said Richa THME LARGET SE LECTBION OF SHEEPSKIN COATS IN ANN ARBOR ALL HANDCRAFTED Men's Women's * Children's Sizes HOUSE OF IMPORTS 320 E. Liberty Ann Arbor 769-8555 Open 7 Days a Week COME TO A COFFEE HOUSE SAT., NOV. 17-8:30 P.M. Israeli Food-Falafal Humus Petah-Techina Israeli & American Folk Music with SCOTT GORDON, JULIE STEINER, JAMIE GIBSON & GILA COLMAN at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. DONATION 75c _ __ . __ _. _. I (Continued from Page 1) Nixon described his election vic- tory last year as a mandate to end the Vietnam war, pursue a perma- nent peace, build asafe and beau- tiful 'country and achieve "a new prosperity without war and without unacceptable inflation." "I am not going to walk away until I get that job done," he said. The President appeared before the realtors between a marathon series of private huddles with members of Congress, most of them Repub- licans. At these week-long sessions, most participants from Congress have emerged to report Nixon is deter-C mined to make a full disclosure in meeting head-on Watergate-related accusations aimed at him and his administration. Following *N i x o n' s breakfast meeting yesterday with 78 House Republicans, however, Rep. Paul on for the 1972 GOP presidential nomination as an opponent of the Vietnam war, said the President referred to his decision to make available selected tapes of con-PIR versations "as a one-shot thing," I and added, "I think the President still does not realize that there's duty on his part to make a full disclosure." Deputy White House Press Sec-3 retary Gerald Warren, asked if Nixon planned to place limitations on the materials he will make _ _ available to the special Watergate prosecutor, said the President will cooperate to the fullest extent but retains a firmly held conviction' that he must defend the principle of presidential confidentiality. Asked if this meant Nixon would decide on a 'case-by-case basis whether to surrender tapes or doc- uments sought by the prosecutor, Warren said, "I would hesitate to limit the President's options." Join The Dai Ilv I tCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard i f i i ' i 1:30, 4 P.M., 6:30 & 9 P.M. McCloskey (R-Calif.) told report- CONNALLY, WHO headed Dem- ers, "I don't think any of us learn- ocrats for Nixon in the 1971 cam- ed anything new . . . It's going to paign, and who has since become be a continuing battle to get the' a Republican, said at the time of truth."' the milk support controversy he McCloskey, who challenged Nix- ........................................... 9 'c "| I.:: ...i. .A. h? wt DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Friday, November 16 SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB, 763-4117 DAY CALENDAR A Attention: Nov. 23 is deadline for ap- Regents' Meeting: Regents' Rm., Ad- plying for the Jan. Exam for Summer min. Bldg., 11 am. Federal Agency Jobs. This exam covers Neuroscience: C. Cummins. "Is There all federal jobs, except the post office. A Metabolic Interrelationship between Contact office for further details. Neurons & Glia?" Neurosci. Lab. Bldg., CIA, Wash. D.C.: Deadline for apply- noon. ing Jan. 15, for seniors and graduate Physics: L. Radicati, "Introduction to students in econ., geography, pol, act., Current Algebra," 205 P-A Bldg., 2 pm. history, linguistics or I.R. Details avail- Astronomy: F. Miller, "Report on the able. NASA Planning Workshop for Comet Kohoutek," P-A Bldg. Colloq. Rm., 4r pm. 'Hockey: Michigan vs Michigan State, Yost Field House, 7:30 pm. Music School: Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro," Mendelssohn, 8 pm. Em Residential College Players: Stop- pard's "Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead," E. Quad Aud., 8pm. AEPi Frayternity T c ;j i t jE I THE MICHIGAN PAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 62 Friday, November 16, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May-I nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. 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REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED FRIDAY, Nov. 16-8 p.m. 1620 Cambridge l.4 i h A/ a > JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL9:00 P.M ,...ir MONNO irrrrwMmm "Kum-mm,«~ '5.2 t- t N Miss J in perfectly peach Pure Wool. . .top-stitched worsted wool gabardine sophisticates in an ambrosial shade of pastel peach. coordinating polyester challis shirts with jockey print on creme. From Patty Woodard in sizes 5-13. A. Low-rise front-zip pants, $36. Shirt with elasticized waist, $17. B. Blouson jacket with stand-up collar, $40 Hip-stitched pleated skirt, $33. Classic long sleeve shirt, $17. *'a JALOW A& I The Wnnlmark la het is vour