Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 6, 1974 Excerpts from Nixon tapes WASHINGTON (A-P-Within a week of the Watergate break-in President Nixon was told that his campaign director J o h n Mitchell may have had some prior knowledge of the wiretap- ping, and Nixon authorized use of the C e n t r a l Intelligence Agency to blnt an FBt investi- gation of the affair. The new evidence iscontained in transcripts of three White House conversations which the President released yesterday, conceding that they may dam- age his chances to s-rciCv im- peachment- Nixon said it is almost a fore- gone concltsion that the llosse willt rote it, impeach him, lead- ing to a trial in the Senate It the transcript oft a mrnrig meeting between Nixon aid his chief of staff H R. " ib" Ilaldeman on June 23, 19,2, the two men ore tuotted as Kncing about the break-itt at I- cn cratic natitnal hicadqnarters ,.ix days earlier. "Well, what the hell, did M.it- chell know abont this?" Nixon asked his chief of staff, H ilde- "I think so," llaldeman re- plied "I don't think ie knew the details, but I thiak he knew." "lie didn't know hton i' was going toi e handled fug- - Nixon said 'Welt, nm sws the asshole that did?" Haldeman said that Gordon Liddy, a former White louse aide later convicted as the ring- leader of the wiretappers, was tnder pressure "to get more in- fornmation, and as he got more pressure, he pushed the people harder to move harder- Nixon: Pressure f r o m Mit- chell? Haldeman: Apparently. Nixon: Oh, Mitchell, Mit.:hell was that point (uintelligible). Haldeman: Yeah. Haldeman told the President that the FBI was "not under control" in its investigation of the break-in. He said Patrick Grav, acting FBI director at the time, wasn't sure how to con- trol an investigation that was threatening to t r a c e money from the pockets of the Water- gate burglars back to campaign checks given to the Nixon cam- paign committees. Ilaldeman said the FBI probe was "leading into some produc- ive areas," and threatened to trace money found on the Wa- tergate burglars back to some checks donated to the Presi- dent's re-election commitee ny a group of Texans and by I<'ci- neth Dahlberg of Minneapolis. "It goes in some directions we don't want it to go," Halde- iimn said. He said Mitchell and White House Counsel John Dean had come up with a plan to get CIA Ieputy Director Vernon Walters to call Gray and say "Stay the hell out of this." Haldeman said t h i s would give Gray a pretext to call off the investigation. Nixon suggested the possibil- ity of getting the donors if the campaign money to say, false- ly, that they had been asked for it by some of the Cuban- Americans who were caught in the burglary. But Haldeman said this would involve too many people. "That's the p r o b l e m, and they'll (the FBI) stop if we take this other route," he said. Nixon: All right. Haldeman: And you seem to think the thing to do is get them to stop? Nixon: Right, fine. Haldeman: They say the only way to do that is from White House instructions . . . The proposal would be that John Ehrlichman and I call them in and say, ah- Nixon: All right, fine. Later that day, according to previous testimony, Ehrlichman and Haldeman met with CIA Di- rector R i c h a r d Helms and deputy director Walters. Wal- ters was ordered to meet with the FBI chief and tell Gray that further attempts to trace the money might endanger CIA operations in Mexico. Nixon told Haldeman to use the name of Howard Hunt to help persuade W a l t e r s and Helms to cooperate, but Halde- man didn't do it. Hunt had been a CIA employe involved in the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, and later joined the White House staff where he helped engineer the burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, using some CIA equipment. His name already had sur- faced in news reports linking him to the Watergate burglary. Later he pleaded guilty in the Watergate case. Nixon suggested that an in- vestigation of Hunt would "un- cover a lot of things." He suggested that Haldeman tell the CIA officials, "You open that scab and there's a hell of a lot of things and we just feel that it would be very detrimental to have this thing go any further. This involves these Cubans, Hunt, and a lot of hanky-panky that we had nothing to do with ourselves." At a second meeting on June 23, just before Haldeman met with the CIA men, Nixon t-ld him again to use Hunt's name. "J u s t s a y, (unintelligible) very bad to have this fellow Hunt, ah, he knows too damned much, if he was involved . . . The Cuba thing, it would be a fiasco. "It would make the CIA look bad, it's going to make Hunt look bad, and it is likely to blow the whole Bay of Pigs thing which we think would be very unfortunate-both for the CIA, and for the country, at this time, and for American foreign policy. Just tell them to lay off." Haldeman: "Yep. That's the basis to do it on. Just leave it at that." But Haldeman reported after the meeting that he hadn't fol- lowed Nixon's suggestion, and that he hadn't mentioned Hunt's name at all. Nevertheless, Walters I a t e r told Gray, falsely, that the FBI's investigation was threat- ening to uncover CIA opera- tions in Mexico. This stymied the investigation temporarily, but G r a y kept pressing Walters to put his words into writing, which Wal- ters refused to do. Finally, Walters told Gray that actually there was no CIA involvement in Watergate, and the FBI probe went forward. At that time, Gray personally warned Nixon that men around him were trying to "mortally wound" him by using the FBI and the CIA. Gray said he was surprised that Nixon didn't ask whom he was talking about. KEEP UP C For the latest news on what's happening at E A the U of concerning the UAw: T CALL 994-1213 FOR AN INSTANT T C RECORDING OF EVENTS AND ISSUES A The U of M admits that their clerical wages are lowerH than that of other employers, and offer an increase JUST BEFORE THE ELECTION, E U WELL ... TAKE THE MONEY AND A P RUN TO THE POLLS!!!! - D VOTE CCFA/UAW For 'v\.9~~ Bargain THE D)AILY CLASSIFIDS mnake. interesting reading IT'S ELECTION DAY! Polls Close at 8 P.M. Pull the Non-Partisan Lever First VOTE SHIRLEY BURGOYNE for 15th DISTRICT COURT JUDGE NEW JUDGESHIP -Paid Political Advertisement TODA Liz Needs Yo For Responsible Repr VOTE FOR Y ur ote esentation 'AYLOR, r ntative r, ELIZABETH T, DEMOCRAl for State Represer TODAY! -Paid Poltxcol Advertisement NNW" U-M 4CHOOL OF MUSIC PRESE:tts MOZARS THE ABDUCT nTHE RAGLIO COMEDY IM THREE ACTS (IN EMH A 15-16.17.18 TICKEn 53.50 800PM 9eMs setF-ADDREsS I9 PEemiclOPE JOSE BLATT, C ODUCTOR RAPH HERBERT, STAGE DIRECTOR AMI ABOIt.481105 B3{OF ImFORMAT '764-05a3 M#FIOO Q 1230-800, AUG1A-1Aa TK K.n SAtIOAUREATtasieT useS c sSOD L\, -- --