Word: haldeman
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
These witnesses have given advance testimony to the Senate committee's staff. Haldeman and Ehrlichman testified at a time when Nixon was claiming that Executive privilege prevented them from relating discussions with him; he has since waived that claim. Some of the points these men will make...
KALMBACH. Drawing on a surplus of $1.1 million from the 1968 Nixon campaign funds, Kalmbach (see box following page) began in mid-1969 to finance secret White House investigations. Directed by Haldeman and carried out by Special White House Investigators John Caulfield and Anthony Ulasewicz, these projects included probes into the backgrounds of such "enemies" as Senator Edward Kennedy, New York Mayor John Lindsay, and House Speaker Carl Albert...
...committee member Lowell Weicker Jr. The money was held in a dummy organization called "the Public Institute," which dispensed some $2.5 million. By 1971 Kalmbach was supplying funds to California Lawyer Donald Segretti, the White House-directed political sabotage agent. Kalmbach's authority to pay Segretti came from Haldeman and Dwight Chapin, former White House appointments secretary...
...seven arrested Watergate burglars. By late in the year, the defendants had been paid $460,000. Kalmbach used Ulasewicz for many of the hush-money deliveries; the two conversed from public telephone booths and used code names ("Mr. Rivers" for Ulasewicz, "the Writer" for Hunt, "the Brush" for Haldeman). Kalmbach decided to pull out of this illegal activity and did so in September...
...Sullivan, a retired J.C. Penney executive in Anaheim, Calif., was especially hard on the President. "I think," he said, "that the whole break-in was discussed and planned with Ehrlichman and Haldeman and that Nixon approved it. But as for impeachment, I just don't know. When other countries overthrow the government, it's chaos. I personally think he should be watched closely for the rest of his term." Paul B. Wynett, a Georgia advertising man, wonders: "How could all those people be doing all those things without his knowing about it? But the best thing...