Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, August 10, 1974 Suit filed against Gill co totned tom Poo U -Wrote miscellaneous SGC checks for $4.497 without per- mission and for which no ac- counting has been made; -Used Mtllin's apparently forged signature in August 1973 to open the Ypsilanti bank ac- count in SG("s name, and trans- ferred $1800 from SGC's valid NBT account into the illicit Yp- silanti account and immediately withdrew the same amount for personal use; -Wrote checks dated from May to December 1973 on the NBT account for $4,859 without proper authorization; Connally denies milk fund charges isnlons Umia Pee -U where in Texas, where Connally is he;id of a louston law firm that is among the nation's lar- est. Conattr is charged with ac- cepting to $5,000 payments friim Associated Milk Producers Inc., a Texas-based dairy-farm er cooperative that is the no- tion's largest. in retortn for help- ing persuade President Nixon to hike milk price supports in 1971. lIe also is charged with lying to a Watergate grand jury on two occasions and cinspiring il- legally to obstruct justice by covering up the alleged bribes. CONNAIlY has cotisistently denied taking the money, IIe his testified that it was ttfered to him as a political fund, not as a bribe, and that he refused to take it. Coniallys one-time friend, Jake Jacobsen, a former White House aide to President Lyndon Johnson, pleaded guilty Wednes- Lay to giving Connally the two paynents., Jactbsen once swore Connally refused the money, but has changed his story and is expect- ed to be the star prosecution witness against Connally at trial, ANOTIIER rtilk - producer of- ficial, former general manager Harold 5. Nelson, has -also pleaded guilty to authorizing the Jacobsen payment for Con- nally, but apparently has no lirst-hand knowledge of whether Cotnnally actually took the Ioney. 1tormer co-np lobbyist Bob lilly has testified, under a g r a n t of immunity, that he gave Jacobsen money al- legedly for Connally. Leaving the courthouse on Friday, Connally was met by an old law-school roommate and former business partner, Rep. J. J. Pickle (D-Tex.) Pickle kissed Connally's wife on the cheek MON.-SAT - SUN -57-9 P in do It to the CI.A. a --I -Made over 500 personal long distance calls at a total ex- pense of $550 for SGC and now has a Council desk valued at $350; -Signed unauthorized checks for $1,117 in SGC funds at the Ann Arbor Bank; -Told Mullin on January 10, 1974 - the date of his resigna- tion - "I don't have to account to yiu for anything' when ques- tioned about use of funds. -Has repeatedly refused to explain any of the above dis- crepencies, and has declined to provide original copies of checks and bank statements, forcing Mullin to order potostatic copies from the banks. DOCUMENTATION offered in the suit suggests Gill and at least one associate spent hun- dreds of dollars of SGC money, exploited the Council's long dis- tance lines to make literally hundreds of calls to New York, Chicago, South Bend, and other cities and consciously attempted to hide their activities from SGC inspection. Sandberg said last March that the charges against Gill stem from Mullin's accidental dis- covery of her signature - in someone else's handwvriting-on an SGC form last February. Gill resigned under fire last January. Ford sworn in as 38th president (Continued from Page 1) Cabinet and key aides, telling them that greatness comes in times of trouble, not triumph, and that defeat can be a be- ginning, not an end. Then Nixon, his wife, daugh- ter Tricia and son-in-law Ed- ward Cox, boarded a heli:opter for a five-hour journey to Cali- fornia and seclusion at San Clemente- BY THE TIME they arrived, Ford was well into his first day's business at the White House Nixon surrendered. He summoned ambassadors from 59 nations, sent message to for- eign ministers around the world, to assure them that U.S. foreign policy remains basically un- changed. In Moscow, the Soviet govern- ment emphasized that the change in leadership will not alter the policy of detente. Ford arranged to address a join tsession of House and Sen- ate at 9 p.m. EDT Monday. HE APPOINTED Jerald ter- Horst, a veteran Washington newsman and career - long friend, to be White House press secretary, TerHorst said the new Presi- dent considers the selection of a new vice president to be of top priority, He said Ford told congressional leaders he hopes to name a nominee within a week or 10 days, -- - b r Q t ;t ° 0 p, ° .. RICHARD NIXON gives a final "thumbs up" to his staff during his farewell yesterday before leaving Washington for California- AP Photo Nixon leaves D.C. for California (Continued fromnPage1) About 200 friends greeted Nixon, his wife and their daughter and son-in-law, Tricia and Edward Cox, at the helipad outside his villa here - which no longer will be called the Western White House. THE NIXONS went to their home alone, To his co-workers at the White House, Nixon said that when things go wrong, when a man suffers defeat, some think that all is ended- "Not true," he said. "It's on- ly a beginning always. The young must know it, the old must know it. They must always sustain it because the greatness comes not when things go al- ways good for you, but the greatness comes when you real- ly take your knocks - -, He counseled: "We want you to be proud of what you've done. We want you to continue to serve in government if that is your wish. Always give your best. Never get discouraged. Never be petty. Always remem- ber, others may hate you. Those who hate you don't win unless you hate them, And then you destroy yourself." Nixon said "we leave with high hopes, in good spirits and deep humility." His face, and that of his daughters and their husbands who flanked him during his 20 minute valedictory, mirrored sadness. Tears came to Nixon's eyes as they did to many in the audience. Afterward he strode across the South lawn of the White House as he did so many times before, to a waiting helicopter that lifted him to Andrews Air Force base for the flight home. MICHIGAN REPERTORY SUMMER '74 ! x S~ drdcl 4auce 197-6 musi ca TON IGHT at 8! POWER CENTER BOX OFFICE OPENS AT NOON 763-3333 CREEP to pay Dems in Watergate lawsuits WASHINGTON (AM - Former President Richard Nixon's re- election committee has agreed to pay the Democrats $775,000 to settle a damage suit, a spokesman for the Democratic National Committee said yester- day. The settlement is the final result of an exchange of dam- age suits by officials of the Committee for the Re-election of the President and the Demo- cratic committee in the wake of the original Watergate break- in. Maurice Stans, once chairman of the financial side of the re- election committee, filed the first suit last September, accus- ing former Democratic National Committee chairman Lawrence O'Brien of "falsely and malici- ously" committing c r i m i n a I acts, O'Brien had spoken out on the June 17, 1972 break-in by seven men paid from re-election com- mittee funds, In subsequent countersuits, O'Brien and current party chair- man Robert Strauss asked $6.4 million in damages. Vince Clephas, a spokesman for the Democrats, indicated a few administration details re- main to be cleared up, but said the $775,000 amount is firm, Although the suits were feed in the names of Strauss, O'Brien and the Association of State Democratic Chairman, all of the money will go to the Demo- cratic National Committee.