Thursday, May 26, 197 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hoge Nine Thursday, May 26, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY s-'age Nine DAILYio CLASSIFIEDS Nixon (Continued from Page 1) Continued from Page 8) "For them to . . . take me on is one thing," Nixon said. "For them to take her on, in PERS AL my view, that's below the belt." STEVEN H.KLEIN has found his But the former president did a Seinr Pod far the sttmmoer. ALLa confirm one account in the ortinsf or the tnumbee d27 book - that the night before Nixon announced his resigna- SNOCK. KNOCK who's there? Sensuous. @ F526 tion, he and Secretary of State - - Henry Kissinger cried and knelt Iknew you could do it, Now that in silent prayer. have a teal job doet get too d fly mer A big fat Abbu Dabu "NOW, HENRY, I know you Lant dF520 ai'd I are both alike in one _ S -way," Nixon recalled saying. tAvo SUMMERth.Fo ALEeen boahteoe "We don't wear our religion on ,ttoatta o tt Antdreystoht tn our sleeve. I'm a Quaker and 62-4401 anytime. eFtc vou're a Jew and neither of us - is very orthodox, but I think I a ttnow if your psycht powers both of its probably have a e related to your amnesia butt they deeer religious sensitivity than e rmazing! By the way, how is e (h> OS0 isome of those that are so loud- RIHSAD dSF520 ly proclaiming it all the time." cOptES-As low as 2"ae. IMPRESS Nixon said he-telephoned Kis- ;sti the Cheapest !) 524 E. william singer later to ask: "Why don't 665-4321., et we just keep that incident to SIENVS~CLINCH-Come for m ourselves?" Nixon said he ha, on3ng. Breakfast all day, great made that suggestion because toups and egg rotts. 3 egg omelets t hfresh vegetables and fresh he felt Kissinger might have ttea sprouts served at day, Sundays been embarrassed by the inci- 10 8. 1313 South University, cFtc dent. XEROX AND OFFSET Nixon also spoke about his fast, tow est dpticatng pardon. COPY QUICK The acceptance of his own" 2;, Utniversity 769-0560 pardon from successor Gerald cFte Ford, in September 1974 when r 0 E EDUCATIONAL, Vocatona, Nixon had been out of office a Personal counseling. Mondays exactly one month, "was a ter- Wednesdays, 1-5 p.m. University rible difficult decision for me, t Counsetng Laboratory. 0 thtrough Jme 13. Phone 764- almost as difficult as resign- 70.3-475 tar an appointment. ing," Nixon said. 83F526 PRMANEN TWEIGHTI LOSS FROST ASKED: "Were there o B e a a v i o r Modiiat onany discussions on the subject of pardon . before you left' HURG0, HONEY office?" . toidt't send 'ot 31thepape "Absolutel not, no, no," {belvt'or0no t) tyttr zip ttt,, tr the nte. tntva, ssaid Nixon. "President Ford rE THE KID" dF520 has 'answered thatt unestion un- CAROL AND PHYLLIS F der oath and I consider that LOVE YOU BOTH, MADLY. I'm responding here, it effect, 33TEttUS. tO tiatnder oath. There were no FINS1DS LAKE COMMUNITY 80- ch discssions." i nI r-rve near Chelsea- Nixon said he hesitated when 33 to', siling, canoeing, pit- his lawyer, Herbert Miller, '~30t3.Al-year aembe- kI3 rtadttlt.nChgl tr roee brought Ford's pardon offer to 3I30 from Bloods, 2005 Penn- San Cmente, "because when ,nn Arbor 48103. 43F611 you receive a pardon, you have f3 t.ceat to sign a piece of paper that Im 3etch on weekends, reason- says, 'I accept the pardon."' S C 1 792720. .59F524 IE SAID he told Miller: DI1SS ERTAT ION d aotk, if I accept the par- Idon, Im in effect admitting gtitt thnt t evoded my income SPECIAL taxes; that I raised the price of milk because of contributors LOW EST PR ICE froom the milk producers; that I sold ambassadorships; that I I N TOW N FOR took campaigno contributions nCdLpottainiOPonSdollarsuint COLLATED COPI ES toy homes; that I engaged in RAC QUALITY the illegal activities including CKHAM QUA T everything from obstruction of GUARANTEED justice to abuse of agencies, to COPY IC < wiretapping.. CuPY yU CK The lawyer, Nixon said, pro- tested that acceptance of a par- 27s. University, 769-0560 don is not an admission of guilt. 3 330H 00. "THAT'S legalisic, pettifog- it3s you who tt patting those ging" Nixon told Frost. "Most 11hen messa es in my file Are you wanted to face trial people, including even Presi- dent Ford, considered that the pardon was in effect an admis- sion of guilt." It meant, Nixon said, "that I would not go to trial on the charges, I would not have a chance to state my side . . . I said, I'd just as soon go through the agony of a trial so that we can scrape away at- least all the false charges and fight it out on those in which there may be a doubt and then I'll take whatever the consequences. are." Nixon said Miller told him that he "had thought it through; in his legal opinion, there was no chance whatever I could get a fair trial." SPECIAL Watergate Prosecu- tor Leon Jaworski came to the same conclusion and Ford cit- ed Jaworski's opinion as a ma- jor reason fo-granting the par- don. Nixon recalled: "Fair trial or no fair trial, here I sat. I sat for an hour in the chair by my- self; I asked Miller to leave the room; and, here in my of- fice in San Clemente, I called him back in and saild 'Well,I will sign it.' NIXON SAID subsequent 9vents were as he expected. "It exacerbated the issue," he said of the pardon. "It was em-' barrassing to Ford. It cost him a great deal." When he called Ford to apologize, Nixon said, Ford told him: "I don't give a damn about the criticism; I did it because it was right." The former president said he had offered funds - from cam- paign contributions held by his friend Charles "Bebe" Rebozo or from his own savings -dto his resigned aides HI. R. Halde- man and John Ehrlichman for their legal defense. IHaldeman and Ehrlichman, whose legal expenses eventual- ly rani to about $500,000 each, refused the offer. NIXON ALSO said he had in- tended to pardon them "if they got a bad rap." But, Nixon said, despite his "deep personal feeling" for the two "if my last act was to pardon everybody who was in Watergate, that would inflame the situation and also would obviously look like the ultimate cover-up." 0 Therefore, Nixon said, "I did not consider it." FROST ASKED: "Did you ever consider pardoning your- self hefore you resigned?" Nixon replied that the stig- gestion was made and that he TONIGHT Pitcher Night si- C"u"-" A'ass had brushed it aside. Unlike Haldeman and Fhr- lichman who asked for pardon in Nixon's last hours as presi- dent, Agnew "never raised any question about clemency or' pressure," Nixon said. IE CALLED the former vice president, who resigned rather than face prosecution in a Maryland kickback scandal, the victim of a double stand- ard. f . "Because he was conserva- tive, because he was one who took on the press, he got a lot rougher treatment than would have been the case had he been one of the liberals' pin-up boys," said Nixon. "When I say 'the liberals' pin-up boys,' you know exactly the ones I mean: those that go down the liberal line and who can see all of the wickedness among conservatives and when ita on their side, well, 'Ha, ha, ha, isn't that just fun and games."' AGNEW ALWAYS insisted he was innocent, Nixon said, add- ing: "He was talking about ... being innocent of bribery . . . that as far as funds were con- cerned, he never indicated to me that he had accepted the funds while he was in the White House." The vice president protested to Nixon that it was common practice in Eastern states for contractors to contribute to ex- penses of governors or county officials, Nixon said. But at the same time, Henry Petersen, head of the Justice Depart- nent's criminal division, was saying the .evidence was so strong, a prison sentence would be recommended for Agnew, if he was convicted by a court. Nixon said "Agnew "strongly urged that I do everything pos- sible, and he was going to do everything possible" to get his case handled through inieach- ment instead of standing trial in court. I, E G A 1. AUTIORITIES were divided on a case involv- ing a vice president - whether to do it through impeachment or a criminal trial. Then, Nixon said, Solicitor General Robert Rork decided that a vice president could be tried in court. "When we got this news," Nixon related, "then frankly Agnew had come to the point where he realized he had no al- ternative . . . to avoid going into a court which would be virtually . . . a kangeroo court where he'd have no chance pnd serve a prison term; that he ought to take the steps that would lead to a settlement of the - matter without a prison term and therefore the resig- nation option became absolute- ly indispensable." FACED WITH Agnew's pro- testation of innocence and the Justice Department's view of overwhelming guilt, Nixon said it didn't matter which version he believed. "There wasn't any question after hearing Petersen and his version, that he (Agnew) was, frankly going to get it. So un- der the circumstances, it be- came an irrelevant point." Nixon said he knows Agnew felt he was being undercut by people in the White House and that he "has bitter feelings, certainly about me. "It was a no-win prsposition," the forrder- president continued. "I felt that in his heart he was a decent man. He was an hon- est man. He was a courageous man. "Ie made mistakes; I mle mistakes . . . I think he felt that he was just part of a sys- tem that had been going on for years." e e ea a en e en e STONIGHT IS T LahrGreek and Dorm Night Freei Admission with Mel Ticket or Chapter Card " AT Alie CiNress HAAdulc S- NOW APPEARING THRU SATURDAY: a AwrdWnnn PlaEy I " T-994-5350 5161. LIBERTY--3 b M h ... ...........i. T# GHt * #* #A 4MY 7MY28MY2 ! .."P.. 8PM. 7PM $3" 4.0 $.0 35 "Lv, agtean"er' a # nBac me"a -A" e h "es Auc Aw"dWnnn Pa LY" M"ELSH 6 PCA:5cofayTce orSuet n eirCtzn " .# 10 f oa oti ikt r ucae o l " #.Tces Ldi ed~ h, i/if tJcbo " "S# ~ e ~ c1-6 iet ui hp ." .#...................e.. .. iu b i e iy i . A eyo the Bun too?!! The VA stories teat! Nothing much happening Arts. Still haven't checked out nW DS conductor. SUSAN B. dF525 EretesareiI~ers! CaO LISTEN TO FRIDAY, MAY 27 Panel discussion: "Sexism in a.m. Children's Toys" ROSETTA SILVAGI, moderator 8:05 p.m. The New York Philharmonic KOSTELANETZ, conductor works by Tchaikovsky, Debussy, Lal, Mendelssohn and Ravel. on WOM917FM,