4 Monday, July 2, 1973 University Dally Kansan Colson Denies That Dean Told Nixon All March 21 WASHINGTON (AP)—Former White house aide Charles W. Colson Sunday disputed John W. Dean III's testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee that Dean Gave President Nixon "a fountain of tears" in the Watergate case last March 21. "I don't believe Mr. Dean laid out all the facts as he said he did on March 21," Colson said on the CBS television program "Face the Nation." Colson, who has left the White House staff to learn law in Washington, said the President called him the evening of October 16 and met with the bottom of the Watergate himself, that he had to find out the truth. He had to find out what was going on. "HE KNEW AT that point that he was being told the truth, that he was given given the truth." Draen, fired as White House counsel on prit prison for five days before the Senate counte- llege committee met. He said that on March 21, he told the President "that there was a cancer growing on the presidency and that if the cancer was killed by it," the President himself would be killed by it. DEAN SAID HE then proceeded to tell all he knew about the June 17, 2012, break-in at the Walmart store in Oakland. Iraqi Minister of Defense Killed BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—The Iraqi defense minister was assassinated by antigone plotters led by the Iraqi security chief. Baidhah announced Sunday. An Iraqi radio broadcast said Gen. Hamad Shibab, a member of the ruling Revolutionary Council Command and a spokesman, was gunned down by a "clause of traitors." headquarters and about his own involvement as well as the of other additions to the library. Denn said that when he finished "I realized I had really made the President There was no mention of Bakr. There were unconfirmed reports that the assassination might have been part of an attempt to overthrow the ruling Baathist party and the regime of President Ahmed In an interview published Sunday in the Washington Post, presidential counsel J. Fred Buzhardt said Nixon was uncertain whether he would answer Dean's request that the President knew of the attempted cover-up of the Watergate scandal. Hassan el Bakr. "I M'T NOT SURE we want to put the president in a position that compels con- ference." Egypt's Middle East News Agency quoted an official statement issued in Baghdad accusing security director Nazim Kazzar of masterminding the plot. The statement said that a group of terrorists had planned banquet Saturday night and sprap a trap on them and other officials at the dinner. "I'm sure the President doesn't know a lot about this," Buzhdart said. "Most people are confused to the deuce. What makes anyone think he's in a different position?" Buzhdart said he didn't doubt Dean "believes in what he said sincerely," but, he added, he thought the former counsel's "imagination got away from him." Labor Department regional director for New York. Colson said he never had any contact with the NLRB and had never heard of the COLSON ALSO SAID a story published Sunday in the New York Times saying he sought to influence the Labor Department and the Nixon's reelection campaign "is not true." Pennsylvania case. He said he did oppose the New York appointment because he thought there was a better candidate for the job. The Times story said Colson sought intervention before the National Labor Board. Union matter; tried to influence a Pennsylvania State Supreme Court decision on a construction union case, and opposed the appointment of a black labor expert as KU Cars to Cut Driving Speed, Air Conditioning to Conserve Gas Official University of Kansas vehicles will be permitted to travel no faster than 10 miles an hour below the posted limit on highways, according to an order given last week by Harry Schwaller, Kansas secretary of administration. "We must conserve gasoline supplies" 'schwaler said when he announced the new pollution control order. Schwaller's ruln, which affects all state agencies, is an effort to reduce gasoline consumption by state-owned vehicles. Although he had not heard of the order, Leo KU physical plant, said Friday that this staff would comply with any directive. "I WILL ASK the citizens of Kansas to send a request to my office in the state capitol, building." automobile traveling over these (reduced) speed limits," Schwaller said in his speech. Besides ordering the mandatory speed reduction, Schwaller directed a restriction of air conditioning use when weather permeates the cabin. To save 10 per cent on gasoline consumption, He also urged that automobiles be kept in good operating condition and that good driving habits be used. He encouraged the use of car pools in driving to and from work and promoted the use of public transportation for all to Topeka-based state agencies which will be in operation beginning yesterday. ALMOST 50 STATE-OWNED vehicles are used by the KU building and grounds department and only three of them are ever seen on the road. He said he, director Harry Buchholz and a man who runs errands for the department were one ones who drove the vehicles on the highway. the company has no obligation to supply the University with any more gas. "Our first step will be to keep from running out of gas for maintenance vehicles," said Nitcher. "We'll probably have to send out cars to filling stations instead of filling them at the building and grounds pumps." ACCORDING TO NITCHER, the University owes seven or eight cars in a carpool, a few department cars and a few automobile trucks, all of which operate on campus. "When the gas runs out, we'll be in the same boat as anyone up and down the street," Nitcher said. "We have money. That's no problem. It will just be less convenient if we have to go somewhere else for gas." Notre Dame Football Star Dies Gas bought at service stations would probably cost more than gas received on a delivery truck. CHICAGO (AP) - Elmer Lyden, one of the fabled Four Horsemen of Notre Dame who excelled at every phase of football from the field to the front office, is dead at 70. The University has received a letter from the legislative post-auditor asking it to make its own account of charge funds, Nichter said. He said that this would save gas that the post-advisor would otherwise use driving to the various state schools. Layden was the slicing, diving fullback for Coach Knute Rocke's 1924 national champion Notre Dame dame. He joined with quarterback Harry Sushlidreher and ballbacks Don Miller and Jim Crowley to form football's most famous backfield. They were versatile, quick and talented. Sportswriter Grandland石烫 stamped them for a special niche in sports when he described his prowess this way: "Outlined against a blue-gray October sky, the Four Horsemen rode again. In dramatic lore, they are known as Famine, Pestilence, Destruction and Death. These are only aliases. Their real names are Stuhlreder, Miller, Crowley and Lavden." Layden died Saturday night in Northwestern University Medical Center where he was admitted June 8 after a six-month illness. Layden was the second of the Four Horsemen to die. Stuldhare died Jan. 26, 1965. Layden, a prep star in Davenport, Iowa, went to Notre Dame in 1921. In the Carnegie Tech game the following year, he was in first place. The team contained Sutherdheer, Miller and Crowley. That season the Irish had a 8-1 mark. In 19234, the polished backfield ran up nine victories and the only loss was a 14-7 decision to Nebraska. A. J. Foyt Wins Race in Final Lap A. J. Foyt MOUNT POCOON, Pa. (AP)—A J. Foy, steel-welter as ever, wheeled his favorite Coyote past fading Roger McCarthy. The team of the Schaefer 500 mile championship auto race. McMuskay, a 42-year-old campaigner from Tucson, Ariz., had held Foyt at bay over the 100 miles of the race run in a crowd estimated at 100,000, a track record. But as McCluskey stormed down the back stretch of the tri-cornered course, his Lindsay Hopkins-owned Eagle suddenly slowed and he coated to a step, out of gas. He was leading Foyt by almost half a lap as the two completed the 1950 circuit of the Foyt, a three-time Indianapolis 500 winner and a five-time national driving champion, was the only driver to complete all of the scheduled 200 laps. His share of the $400,000 purse amounted to about $80,000. It was the first 500 mile championship victory for the famed Texan since his last Indy triumph in 1967. McCluskey, sick enough to cry at his bad luck, said he had hoped to get by without another fuel stop and hastened his 40-gallon final stop three miles too short. "That's a $20,000 mistake," he said disconsolately. Third place went to Lloyd Rybir of Wichita Falls, Tx., at 45 the oldest driver in the race; fourth to Mike Mosley of Clermont, Ohio; fifth to John Rubery of Ft. Worth, Tx. It had been a battle between Foyt and McCluskey during the later stages of the race, the two veterans driving past the works before that sent early leaders to the sidelines. The race was slowed 10 times by yellow lights, starting with the first lap when Rutherford lost control and hit the first turn guard rail. He escaped damage to himself, but his car never ran well the rest of the way. Billy Casper Out of Rough Bags Trophy CHICAGO (AP)—Billy Casper swept past Bruce Crampton and an end to the longest, most dismal slump of his career. He was a star in day in the Western Open Golf Tournament. The 42-year-old Casper shot a two-under 69 in the final round for the 49th victory of his career but the first since the fall of 1971. He ran in a crucial, eight-foot p putt on the last hole to nose our Larry Hinson with a 272 total—12 under him on the 6,845 yards of Midland Country Club course. Hinson, a skinny blond lookalike for absent U.S. Open champion Johnny Miller, and also fighting a two-year slam, shot a single down in a tie for second at 273, one stroke back. Nichter, vice candleman of business affairs, said the University had an annual contract that supplied KU with a limited quantity of gas. Once that supply runs out, Hale Iwin, who finished about 20 minutes behind Casper and Hinson, birdied the final round. Crampton, an Australian veteran who has won four times this season and led by two streaks in the championship to a 73 and was tied with J. C. Sneed and Green in tournament-pair. The Seed had a 66 and Green in tournament-pair. Arnold Palmer 'once again got into position to win but couldn't pull it off. The 43-year-old Palmer matched par 71 for the final round and a 276 total. 'A Full House The Yanks Have Suddenly Got it All Together,' McDowell Says The Washington Post By WILLIAM GILDEA WASHINGTON-Ralph ("You never have problems if you got enough starters") Hook collected so many pitchers his dugout runeth over. So does his bulpen. The crowd in the crowd is that there are so many lifters up space. And good reserves. AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. G.B. Chicago 47 37 49.8 St. Louis 57 38 49.8 Baltimore 37 38 49.8 Philadelphia 36 40 48.4 Montreal 36 40 48.4 New York 34 40 46.6 W. L. Pct O.B. New York 51 37 239 Baltimore 65 33 239 Milwaukee 38 37 509 Detroit 38 37 506 Boston 36 36 516 Chicago 36 36 514 New York 5, Cleveland 2, Indianapolis 3, 2nd Detroit 8, Baltimore 7, Detroit 8, Baltimore 6, 2nd Detroit 8, Baltimore 6, 2nd Boston 10, Boston 10, Oakland 6, Chicago 4, 1st Minnesota 6, California 1 Los Angeles 51 29 638 58 San Francisco 46 35 638 51 Hawaii 40 37 638 51 Cincinnati 41 37 626 9 Atlanta 34 46 425 17 Miami 15 25 425 17 NATIONAL LEAGUE Results Pittsburgh 6. Montreal 2.1 Pittsburgh 8. Montreal 3.1 Pittsburgh 7. Montreal 4.2 Cincinnati 3. Los Angeles 2. 10 innings Chicago 5. New York 2. 5 Chicago 6. New York 2. 5 Atlanta 8. San Francisco 2. 5 Atlanta 8. San Francisco 4. 5 Boston 5. St Louis 0. 5 San Diego 1. San Diego 0. 5 This accumulation of talent has the Yankees talking pennant, the New York Times writing of a "dynasty" and people pushing and showing their way to Yankee Stadium in post-World-War-II period. The youngsters from the Mets are enchanting their homages? Hardly anyone arched an eyebrow in San Francisco recently when the Giants unloaded Sam McDowell for a large piece of equipment that could be certain that few, if any, tears were scared in the庐华 when the Braves dumped Pat Dobson. Those teams' earnings run averages dropped dramatically when the Giants dumped McDowell were scrapped from their rosters. "I don't mean to sound boastful," said McDell, sounding boastful, "but the Yankees are going to win it because of Sam McDell. That was when he joined the team. And maybe there was a snicker or two heard from the Giants. But that was the 30-year-old McDell pitched the ball and scored four times looking like "Sudden Sun." once again. He had not been boastful after all, maybe just truthful. AND YET their coming in New York has been marked by so much tumult and glee one might think Ruth and Gehrig had hit town together. "I THINK we're definitely going to do it," he said. "I'm in as good shape as I've ever been in my life." He can throw just as hard as he did when I attended. Well, maybe not, for a whole game. In search of truth, a caller found McDowell in the town of his youth, Cleveland, resting up for another pitching assignment last week. Success has not spoiled Sam and his team. It changed his earlier opinion that the Yanks have suddenly got it all together. "If we don't win it now, there's something wrong." Bobby Murcer said. There's a lot like being a Yank, all that good pitching, which includes Dobson—"t thought he was doing pretty good at it," she said. "And here he's been great!" and all that bitterness. "But when I have to." he said. For the Yankees, who are borrowing a theme, the future is now, and they have the money to move the future right up to the present. They have spent freely, as in McDowell's case, and not have hesitated to carry more than two fistfuls of high-salary cash; they have gambled their youth—the Charlie-Torres for Craig Nettles—and they will gamble more when the note for Dobson comes due in October. THEY COLLECT Alou's, Matty and Felipe, which is always a sound practice, and no controversy seems big enough to sidetrack them. Mike Kochich is gone and nobody talks about the wife-swapping affair anymore. The latest matter of contention centers on a 400 hitter who only plays part in a team against him. Jon Borglumberg can hit hefted pitchers. So why did the Giants get rid of McDowell and then tell the world all they needed to do? First of all, McDowell said, he could never get out of the bullpen. "I was in the starting rotation in the "I love heat," he said. "In 1969, I lost 21 pounds pitching in 104-degree heat in Washington (Heat that, wrote Arlin and Clay Kirby?). I just loved it. I nearly passed "They have a bad financial problem," McWillow added. "They needed money bad. McWillow had money." BUT THERE must have been more than that? So the Yankees are gambling, and they have gambled well up to now. That McDowell will find happiness back in the American League and bring them some too. Indeed, he seems happy, like Dobson, claiming to be a hot-wetter pitcher. Oh, yes the Giants. The Giants. McDoe might have said he thought of it, is dead. LARSON CRIMES AND CORONA SCENEED WITH CALIFORNIA COLOR PRESENTS LARSON A PESTER IN THE RAPTURE OF THE MAYBE CONDITIONS TABLE AND MATE TO GIVE SPECIFICATIONS IN KEY A GREAT STAINLESS STEEL CLEANER WITHOUT REMOVING NITROUS CONDENSEMENT COOKING ON MODEL 6110 FOR THE HAIR CONTAINER NO PROPRIETARY MARKS LOTION CREAMS AFTER MATH SPILL LION LEMON, HONEYMOLE OF ORANGE BLOOMS. A NON- ALCOHOLIC SENSE BEENNIP. PRESENTED BY KICK IN AMINO ACIDS CONDITIONS AND GIRLS BODY MACROC HAND CREAM EAST MOUNTAIN CONNOUNCING MACROC OIL AND LINEN JULY 14 FOR THE BATH ANADISE CLEMEN WITH VITAMIN C OR EVITAMIN D WITH THE SCALE OF (FRESH STRENGTH) FORESTAL CARAMEL MIXED CHOCOLATE WATER MIST MAYO MILK MIST COASTAL CREAM COLOR BUTTER AND COCOAT CULEAT AND TREE CULEAT DENTRA WORLD OYAMA - MURPLE RASH - WHILLY COVER, - JAHMINE, STRAWBANE, NIGHT OR - SANDAMAS A NATURAL SKIN SCIENTIFIED WITH ANY OF OUR FREELINES 7/16 164 PAGE 92 PRESIDENT, LONGFIELD AVOCADO ORL... #4 PER OZ SCROLLBOK VIDEO LOTION WANDA LONDON HARRY LOGAN WITH EXELLENT LUCAS CRAFT VANNE TALKER JOHN MAYNE AVOCADO LOTION MINTS CHAMPION JARDIN COCONUT CLEANING CREAM Oil PATIENT LONDON PROTECT SEMI AND PEDICURES ORTHALYSIS TREATS OSCULATION TRAINS, 4 IN FOUR FEET ON VOOR LORDS WITH WIT E ROUND SCREEN LORDS WITH PENNANTS OF WIT E...254 POR 62 Prof to Create Teaching Aids $A8, 285.213 grant has been received by Gary M. Clark, associate professor of education, from the Bureau of Education for the U.S. Department as a division of the U.S. Office of Education. The purpose of the grant is to enable Clark to develop special training modules for educators who deal with handicapped children in secondary schools. Clark said the grant had been cut 26 per cent from the amount initially requested by the agency. "We first asked for $119,000," he said, "and help us to accomplish about three fourths of that." Clark said the decrease would also prevent his department from developing media aids for use in instructing teachers to deal with handicapped students. Clark said the modules were principally for use in training teachers to deal with the challenges. "Also, we won't be able to field-test our modules as extensively as we had hoped," The training modules will be used at Hartsville High School at Fort Hava, Ecstasia and Pitkin. 'One of the problems we have is that there are many who have never received any training for this type of work," he said. Clark said the response to his project had been quite good and that his office had received a positive response when the training program would be ready. "Being able to develop these modules fast enough to meet the demand for them is going to be one of our biggest problems," he said. Union Alarm Set Off By Burned-Out Bulb Emmett Smith, assistant building engineer to the Union, arrived shortly after the alarm sounded to replace the burned-out cabin. Smith had caused the system's malfunction. A malfunction of the Kansas Union sensor system, designed to detect smoke, sent campus security forces at 9:45, Sunday evening to the Union ballroom. 1973 Present TI Dav has Dou A Mik "SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN" Refreshments and Entertainment in New Murphy Courtyard at 7:30 p.m. **Pictured:** Ticket Prices: 52.00-$u末 $10.00-$u末 Reservations: Telephone: 864-7982 July 2,3,5,6,7 Experimental Theatre Murphy Hall Curtain 8:00 p.m. A Collage of Scenes by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE