Thursday, July I I, 1974 ,- mIn-'""n.: ur I, w.- More excerpts from tape transcripts WASHINGTON (A') - Slight differences in punctuation and word order in the House Judic- iary Committee transcript of President Nixon's March 21 meeting with John Dean suggest that Nixon knew more facts than the White House transcripts of the same meeting indicated. A discussion about original Watergate defendant H. How- ard Hunt is recited this way in the Judiciary transcript: President: Well, your, your major, your major guy to keep under control is Hunt. Dean: That's right. President: I think. Because he knows Dean:sHe knows so much. President: About a lot of oth- er things. Dean: He knows so much. Right. In the White House transcript, however, Nixon is portrayed as inquiring rather than asserting: President: Your major guy to keep under control is Hunt? Dean: That is right. President: I think. Does he know a lot? Dean: He knows so much. In another exchange, Nixon is portrayed by the Judiciary tran- script as knowing about the veil- ed contribution of $400,000 in leftover campaign funds to an Alabama campaign of George Wallace. Dean: . .. I assume this was four hundred; uh, that went President: Wallace. Dean: To Wallace. Right. But in the White House trans- script, the exchange read: Dean: . . . I assume this was 100,000 that went to Wallace. President: Wallace? Dean: Right. Later in the same meeting, Dean is discussing a New York federal grand jury's probe of former campaign officials Maur- ice Stans and John Mitchell. In the Judiciary transcript, it is Nixon who interjects that the case involves financier Robert Vesco. In the White H o u s e transcript, it is Dean who cite.s Vesco. PRESIDENT NIXON said a proposed payoff to Watergate Defendant E. Howard Hunt is "worth it, at the moment," ac- cording to a House Judiciary Committee transcript of Nixon's March 21, 1973 meeting with counsel John Dean. -- The comment was omitted in a White House transcript of the same meeting. A crucial issue in the House panel's impeachment investiga- tion is whether Nixon authorized a payoff to Hunt to buy his si- lence. . The Judiciary Committee tran- script quoted Dean discussing "how to minimize the further growth of this thing, rather than further compound it by, you know, ultimately paying these guys forever." President: "Yeah." Dean: "I think we've got to look-" President: "But at the mo- ment, don't you agree that you'd better get the Hunt thing? I mean, that's worth it, at t h e moment." Dean: "That, that's worth buying time on, right." President: "And that's ,Guy- ing time on, I agree." In the White House versin, Dean also was saying "I think we've got to look-" when Nix- on interrupted. President: "But at the mo- ment, don't you agree it is better to get the Hunt thing that's where that-" Dean: "That is worth buying time on." President: "That is buying time, I agree." -- CHECK US OUT! UNION y STYLISTS I at the Union OPEN Monday-Soturddyj PRESIDENT NIXON suggest- ed that former fund-raiser Her- bert Kalmbach not put out the full story about a secret $1.7- million fund, according to a House Judiciary Committee transcript of a presidential con- versation. The discussion took place on March 21, 1973 between Nixon and his counsel, John Dean. They were discussing funds Kalmbach had handled and what a grand jury might ask about them, and about use of the funds to pay political saboteur Donald Segretti. The Judiciary version says: President: How would you handle him, then, John. F or example, would you just have him put the whole thing out? Dean: Draws breath President: I don't think so. I meant I don't mind the five hundred thousand dollars and I don't mind the four hundred thousand dollars. In the White House version, Vixon asks the rhetorical ques- tion and then answers by say- ing: "I don't mind the $500,000 and the $400,000." The phrase "I don't think so" does not ap- pear in the White H o u s e version. PRESIDENT NIXON believed Vice Chairman Howard Baker of the Senate Watergate com- mittee was refusing to talk to White House people because Baker thought his phone w as tapped. The House Judiciary Commit- tee's transcript of a presidential tape recording made on March 22, 1973 contains this reference to the Tenessee Republican sen- ator that did not appear in the White House-edited version of the same conversation. Nixon: ". . . Baker is not proving much of a reed up to this point. He's smart enough." . Former Atty. Gen. John Mit- chell: "Howard is smart enough, but, uh, we've got to carry him. Uh, I think he has and I've been puzzling over a way to have a liaison with him and, and, uh-" Nixon: "He won't talk on the phone with anybody, according to Atty. Gen. Richard Klein- dienst. He thinks his phone is tapped." Mitchell: "He does?" Nixon: "Who's tapping h i s phone?" Mitchell: "I don't know." Nixon: "Who would he thiak, who would he think would be taping his phone? I guess may- be that we would." Mitchell: "I don't doubt that." Nixon: "He must think that Watergate committee Chairman Sam Ervin-" Mitchell: "Maybe." Nixon: "Or, a newspaper." Mitchell: "Newspaper, or, or the Democratic party or some- body . FISH RESOURCES ARE LIMITED WASHINGTON U/)--Far from having a limitless resource in the sea, the world is nearing the limit of its fishery possibilities, says Dr. Robert M. White, chief of the National Oceanic and At- mospheric Administration. 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PHONE 761- 0450 48103 Key Performer At mid-point, "Summer" Face offers concertogers the chasnce to hear again GRANT JOHANNESEN, one of America's top-notch pianists who has harvested acclaim from the critics of five continents. In his thirty years of concertizing, Mr. Johannesen has achieved international stature, appearing in solo recitals, in joint recitals with his wife, cellist Zara Nelsova, and with major symphony orchestras. For his sixth Ann Arbor visit, he presents the following program: BACH: Fantasia and Fagru in A minor SCHUBERT: Sonata in B-flat (posthumous) SCHUMANN: Six Intermezzi, OP.4 FAURE: Noctrine in D-flat DEBUSSY: Two Etudes ROUSSEL: Bourree Recital on Monday, July 15, in air-conditioned Rackham Auditorium at: 8:30; tickets at $2.50, $4, and $5. Burton Tower, Ann Arbor Weekdays 944:30, Sat. 9-12 Phone 665-3717