Page V en THE SUMMER DAILY Friday, June 15, 1 973 Frustrated Connally may quit his post as 'informal' advisor (Continued rois Page 3) with Nixon Tuesday afternoon, Connally emerged looking pre- occupied and rather grim. Shortly thereafter he boarded a plane for Texas. The fact that the President and Connally have not renewed their strong personal relationship of S1971-72apparently stems in part from circumstances that sur- rounded Connally's return to the administration. WITH THE Watergate scandal becoming an increasing personal burden, Nixon summoned Con- nally to his Key Biscayne, Fla., home early last month and of- fered him a high-profile, per- manent position. Connally refused and, some sources said, may <:have angered the President, who needed to recruit high-powered talent as he rebuilt his shaken administration. "Connally couldn't afford a full- time job," one informant said. AP Photo "He's not as rich as many people JEB STUART MAGRUDER testifies before the Senate Watergate think. He has a lot of assets, but Committee yesterday, telling the panel that former Atty. Gen. also a lot of liabilities." John Mitchell approved the Watergate bugging plans, THE ONE-TIME strong man of Magruder testifies Mitchell approved Watergate bugging the Nixon cabinet was dismayed, ported the former governor is one source said, when the White giving a little thought now to House made a formal announce- 1976 politics, an intimate friend ment that he was becoming a was quoted as saying Connally special adviser to Nixon. This is obsessed with the subject. was quickly followed by publish- One Texas political operative ed speculation his private in- said Connally's pride was deeply terests' might conflict with his wounded by his relegation to a public responsibilities-a devel- relatively minor.role in adminis- opment that forced him to sever tration councils. ties with his law firm and to "You can criticize him or dis- resign from corporate director- agree with him," the source said, ships. "but once you've hurt his pride, ALTHOUGH it has been re- you've lost him." r i64 &J Z4D-t - $\ 1 . t Ate 00 4 Continueid ifrm P'ge oI to Liddy but "I asked him to do something about his problems in an attempt to be helpful." MAGRUDER SAID in the Jan- -uary conversation he told Halde- man all aboit the cover-up he said began the day that five men were arrested in Watergate. le said thev also discussed Ma- gruder's own future, whether he would receive the financial and legl aid promised the seven or- igiaX Watergite defendint-. After M gruaer's talk with the chief of -taft, he was gi-en a $3hWtltt0-ve' ob in the ('m mtice 1)e_-rtment - the highest gi'.'erimiiieit 5)5ition that does not -eitiire 'it coolfrmation. Ho' wiis fired April 26 IHIIadeian resigiiid four diss lst: r. ASTHE 'OVERT-UP stry de- veloped, M,grider s'iid, Strachan drfpned out of the picture "and Mr. Dean bisicvlly became our liaison in the cover-up.' Dean is scheduled as the next witness and his testimoni is ex- pected to take all three das of next week. He has s'iid he talked with the President 30-40 times about Watergate in the Januars- March period this year. "Would yoi say Mr. Dean was conducting an investigation or a cover-up?" Magruder was asked. "I THINK, senator, there was never an investigation," was the reply. "There was a cover-up?" "yes ." MAGRUDER SAID M a u r i c e Stuns, chief fund-raiser for the campaign, was told in general terms about the Watergate raid at a meeting with Mitchell on June 24-seven days after Water- gate. Stuns testified Wednesday he didn't recall such a meeting. Asked what Haldeman offered hini in the way of executive clemency, Magruder replied: "He w i sery careful to say he had no aithority over that issue and could not speak to that." "It iould he unfairii to Mr. Hal- demnln to s that he knew about it, iCiise I don't knoir that," M grider s"id. "I csnnt spe- cific. tis comment on direct ip- Icm at of these plans or knowtl edge of these plas by Mr. HIl- deiian I don't know he knew of these lt-ns beforehand. "IT IS MY understanding Strachan i'issed to Mr. Halde- m what lie, Strachan, deemed important enough for Mr. IHalde- man." WIILE T H E BURGLARY plans were being worked out with Gordon Liddv in the first three months of last year, Ma- gruder said, Haldeman aide Gordon Strachan received re- ports of everything being dis- cussed. "I am not privileged to the memos that went between Dean and Strachan and Haldeman and the others at the White House," lie said. "My first discussion with Hal- deman was the Sunday after the break-in. I did not have further discussions with him until Janu- ary." IN THAT EARLIER conversa- tion, on June 18, Magruder said, Haldeman ordered him to clear up the problems caused by the arrest of James McCord, who was security chief of Nixon's re- election committee. Magruder said lie had no knowledge the President was aware "of our errors in this mat- ter." "It's very easy for me to see isw he would not le aware," Magruder said. "I'm just posi- tive that many things occurred in the White House that he was not aware of. It was just the wsvi-r that system worked." Q. YOU SAY his staff kept hiiim so remote and "isolated this could have taken place without his knowledge? A. Yes. Magruder said the cover-tip began immediately after the ar- rest of the men inside the Wat- ergate office building. "I DON'T THINK there ever was any discussion that there wouldn't be a cover-up," said Magruder, the deputy director of Nixon's re-election campaign. "If it had gotten out, and peo- ple like John Mitchell and others had been involved at that point in time, I honestly thought . . . that the President might lose the election." Cinema II FRIDAY 15 JUNE DEAD RECKONING 1947 HUMPHREY BOGART, LIZABETH SCOTT This chase melodrama featuring Bogie as a war vet investigating the disappear- ance of his hero buddy gives hi m"some of the best all-around dialogue he has had in a long time . . . The revenge our hero enjoys is a dilly and sets some- thing of a new high in savage melodramatics."-N.Y. 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