Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, }-u l y 20, 1974 Judiciary unit releases new evidence WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Six volumes of material released yesterday by the ouse Judic- iary Committee contained little evidence supporting charges that President Nixon ordered favorable government decisions in return for campaign contribu- tions from the milk industry and ITT. But the committee noted that the White Ilouse had ignored its subpoenas for 66 days on the milk and ITT cases, and Demo- crats have said there is enough evidence available to include the two matters in articles of impeachment the committee will debate next week. THE MATERIAI included tapes of six previously unre- leased White House conversa- tions. When they heard the evi- dence several weeks ago, Re- publicans and Dlemocrats agreed there was little to sub- stantiate charges that the ad- ministration settled its antitrust suit against ITT aftet- receiving pledges of $200,000 to defray costs of the 1972 Republican Na- tittinal Convention While tetspiihcaiis felt there was little evidence that Nixon raised milk trice supports in 1971 in return fo a $2 million campaign pledge, several 13em- ocrats agreed with Rep. Eliza- beth Ilt itma swhoi said "we have a case for brihery here. Committee Democrats draft- ed possible impeachment arti- cles this week that included both the ITT and milk matters. The six volumes included two by James St. Clair, Nixon's chief Watergate lawyer. St. Clair maintained that Nixon played no role in settling the ITT suit, and that price sup- ports on raw milk were raised because of "economic and tra- ditional political considerations" -not because of the campaign pledge. ONE NEWLY published tran- script shows Nixon, his speech punctuated by profanity, order- ing that his antitrust chief abandon all efforts to block the biggest corporate merger in history. But there was nothing in the tape linking Nixon's action to ITT's offer. The President's demand on April 19, 1971, that the case be dropped followed months of relentless pressure by ITT executives on numerous high government officials, and came on the heels of the firm's offer to defray convention expenses. According to the transcript, Nixon spoke brusquely to Richard Kleindienst, then dep- uty attorney general. Nixon or- dered Kleindienst to tell Rich- ard McLarens, head of the anti- trust division, to drop the suit against itT. "I WANT something clearly understood, and, if it is not understood, McLaren's ass is to be out within one hour. The IT&T thing - stay the hell out of it. "Is that clear? That's an order. The order is to leave the God damn thing alone. "Now, I've said this, Dick, a number of times and you fel- lows apparently don't get the message over there. I do not want McLaren to run around prosecuting people, raising hell about conglomerates, stirring things up at this point. Now, you keep him the hell out of that. Is that clear? "Or either he resigns. I'd rather have him out anyway. I don't like the son-of-a-bitch." Kleindienst, later nominated to succeed John Mitchell as attorney general, said at his confirmation hearing the follow- ing March, "I was not inter- fered with by anybody at the White House. I was not impor- tuned, I was not pressured; I wais not dirdcted." ON MAY 16, Kleindienst pleaded guilty to false testimo- ny and was given a one-month suspended sentence. However, none of the mater- ial shows Nixon was aware Kleindienst was ' lying. But Kleindienst's statements were covered fully by news media at the time and caused the White House such concern that a spe- cial committee was formed to make sure the nomination go through the Senate. St. Clair argued that: "there exists no testimonial or docu- mentary evidence to indicate that the President had any part, directly or indirectly, in the settlement of the ITT an- titrust cases." McLaren had lost his attempt to block ITT'S merger inten- tions in the lower courts, but was confident of winning in the Supreme Court. When Nixon learned that the next day was the last day for an appeal to the high court, he acted swift- ly. "I don't know whether ITT is bad, good or indifferent," he told Kleindienst. "But there is not going to be any more anti- trust actions as long as I am it this chair . . God damn it, we're going to stop it." The 984 pages of evidence about "The 1971 Milk Price Support Decision" included three previously unpublished transcripts of Nixon conversa- tions, all on March 23, 1971. They revealed Nixon engaged in no direct conversations that tied the price the support in- crease to the campaign pledge. The report said that hours after Nixon met with milk producers that day about in- creasing milk price supports, White House aide John Ehrlieh- man attempted to get them to reaffirm a campaign pledge of $2 million. According to testimony by Herbert Kalmbach, then Nix- on's private lawyer and cam- paign fundraiser, Ehrlichman called him that same afternoon to set up a meeting for the following day with Murray Cho- tiner, a long-time Nixon aide and then a dairy lawyer. "It's my best memory that I was informed there was going to be an announcement on the price support the following day," Kalmbach said in testi- mony the committee reprinted from the Senate Watergate Committee. "And in view of that, that Mr. Ehrlichman asked Mr. Chotiner to talk to me and reaffirm to me that the milk people would reaffirm their pledge of $2 million to the 1972 campaign." According to the committee, the milk producers made a pledge of $2 million to Nixon's re-election Dec. 16 or 17, 1970, in a letter hand-delivered to the White House. Two weeks later, Nixon signed a proclamation lowering the import quotas on certain dairy products. In all, milk cooperatives chipped in more than $800,000 to his re- election campaign. The Agriculture Department in early March 1971 set the price support for raw milk at $4.66 per hundredweight, or about 79 per cent of parity. Two days after Nixon's meeting with the dairy leaders, the depart- ment reversed itself and set the support at $4.92, or 85 per cent of parity. Be careful with fire: There are babes in the woods. STARTS FRIDAY I've come -ions way, Boby!" Get to know the two of you before you become the threeofyou. Get to know what you both really like. What you both really want out of life. Get to enjoy your freedom together until you both decide you want to let go of a little bit of it. But make it your choice. Research statistics show that more than half of all the pregnancies each year are accidental. Too many of them, to couples who thought they knew all about family planning methods. Get to know how the two of you don't have to become the three of you. Or the four of you.Or... Planned Parenthood Children by choice. Not chance. fwi urter information, write Planned Parenthoe4, Box 431, Radio City Station, New York. N.Y. 10019. Ptanaed Pareetthd l4 a national, a-proft orgisatien dedie e te dn g teforatiaa am4*electin MeaA u f family aanmg I. ai whg mla . edt dwadesiemig .Oat te -erthe z.NRUEIAffF eiu 't4E UvE f lTHE CA os5E[K~RANTZ p64sdu .pKce 6yS KMT 4dircd TAOYLWOR 1 1Isahr E ,w~tKnbRiJ AYIO,F D HALIIIXA & WMOTE Oir5iimuo c ttibc n &0N4