Page Ten Magruder: Mitchell approved bugging THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, June 6, 19 73 Cable TV manager causes turmoil in local station staff (Contnnued Ifrom Page i) prosecutors an account of how the wiretapping h a d b e e n pianed. According to the Magruder ver- sion, Mitchell approved the wire- tapping reluctantly after more elaborate schemes of political espionage also proposed by liddy had been rejected. The approval n-as given orally at a meeting of Mitchell, Magru- der and LaRue in late March, 1972, the account went on. Mit- chell also gave oral approval to wiretap the Democratic conven- tion offices at the Fountainbleau hotel in Maimi Beach, Fla., and the Washington headquarters of Sen. George McGovern's presi- dential campaign according to the account. "MAGRUDER described this as non-decision," Ehrlichmann said. "Really nobody was terribly enthusiastic with the 'indertaking but they had to i'i smething to acquire general information about the opposition and it was almost decided by default is the impli- cation." Meanwhile yesterday, a White House spokesman said there will be a review of whether logs d'e- tailing conversations between Nixon and Dean will be made available to Watergate prosecu- tors. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren had said on Mon- day the logs would not be made available. Yesterday, Warren said that statement had been an erroneous interpretation on his part of what he had been authorized to say; namely that the logs were presi- dential papers and therefore not subject to subpoena. THE LOGS became important after it was reported that Dean was prepared to testify that he had met with Nixon 35 to 40 times to discuss aspects of the coverup. The White louse has said re- peatedly that the President knew nothing of the coverup. fO rfAICPKI!CrT IN THEN]MEANTIME, a former aide in the Nixon re-election campaign told the Senate Waler- gate committee that he put docu- ments labeled "Gemstone"-the code word for political espionage papers- into a file intended for use at - meeting with Mitchell. Robert I eisner, at one time an aide to Magruder, said the Gem- stone material wvent into a file of "things Mr. Magruder wished to take up to Mr. Mitchell." Reisner told the senators that a copy of each paper that went through him to Mitchell was copied and the duplicate went to MITCHI II. R. (Bob) Haldeman, Nixon's knew o chief of staff. plans. "We were working for the President who was the candi- date," he said, "so we were providing the opportunity for him to see any documents re- lating to the campaign." Eatlier, hiddy's former secre- CHIC tary, Salty Ilarmony, told the people it committee she typed memoranda citizeosh from sources known to her only - as Ruby fne, Ruby Two and Dale Crystal. She said she did not from the know she was typing wiretapped fro th conversations. A secretary, she cago "ta added, reads words, not content. problem HARMONY DENIED it n d e r Chu oath that she had told friends that she lied or planned to lie to mayor the Watergate grand jury, as tradition was alleged in a deposition by a Each fellow former employn at the re- fCi election committee. And she said of Chico she had not been given a trip to Dale Florida as a reward for perjury. laughed Before calling Harmony, the twelfth witness, Ervin's commit- tee met in executive session to reply to a request by Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox for a delay of three months or so in the hearings. GeMo Afterward, E r v i n announced to bus that the committee "unanimously denle.r determined that its duty requires qualit it to decline such a request." maior Ala (Continued from Page 3) IDOMURAT, WHIO was Channel 3 news director and has worked at two other TV stations, has been described bv one local newsman as "one of the most competent people I have ever worked with." She disagrees with most policy decisions that have been made at the station and thinks the station probably should have held off with programming until they had' more subscribers to cover costs. "There are certain basics, just in terminology, that you have to ELL: Magruder says he f the Watergate bugging Daley extends honorary citizenship to 16 Chinese 'AGO (Al- Calling Chinese-Americans the "finest family n our city," Mayor Richard Daley extended honorary Chicago ip yesterday to 16 visiting Chinese journalists. y, speaking through an interpreter, told the 21-member group People's Republic of China that Chinese-Americans in Chi- ke care of both their young and their old. There's no welfare in the Chinese community." Mu-chil, director of the Hsinhua News Agency, presented the with a five-foot-square silk brocade tablecloth, depicting a al Chinese garden. Daley promised to hang it in City Hall. journalist received a medallion showing the seal of the city go and the individual journalist's name. y said they now could vote in Chicago elections, and they know about television," she said. "Dolph doesn't have them vet but he thinks he can just walk onto the set and learn." DOLPH SAYS he is satisfied with the staff lie has working now. "They are just beginning to sork creati el ," he said. "In fact, thee has-en't es-en really begun." "Network people have been working for years to think up new ideas," Doimurat said. "I told Dolph the ftin gimmicks have already been tried and thee don't work." Cable 3 presently broadcasts two local shows, '(onuinit Dialogue" and "Toay's Woman in addition to the news at 5:30 sports events and meetings THERE IS NO public access channel available without ti to week notice until Dolph recei-es an indemnity 'ond front the city assuring that the station cannot be sued. Dolph says "television has a 30 year history of being an opiate" and that traditional forms are not appropriate for a cable system. But he is vague about the creative programming he promises to institute. Al FRI.-SAT. Owen McBrie. 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