6 Tuesday, June 26, 1973 University Daily Kansan Dean Implicates President Nixon role in the wiretapping, almost three months before Lidv was indicted. From Page One LIDDY EVENTUALLY was one of the seven men convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the June 17, 1972, entry at the Watergate office building. "It's a very difficult thing for me to testify about other people," Dean told senators as they spoke. “It’s far more easy for me to explain my own involvement of this matter, the fact that I was involved in the obstruction of justice, I assisted another in perjured testimony, the fact that I made personal use of funds that were in my custody.” DEAN SAID he borrowed $4,850 from $13,200 entrusted to him, to finance his expenses. He insisted he did not know specifically about the Watergate break-in before it happened, but that he sat in on meetings with Mitchell, Magruder and Liddy when bizarre forms of political espionage were discussed. Dean said Haldeman and Ehrlichman directed the extensive cover-up activities, including efforts to sidetrack a congressional investigation, destroy evidence, tailor the testimony of principals in cases, and increase intelligence Agency for all that had happened. AT A MEETING March 13, Dean said, Nixon told him that Colson had discussed an offer of executive clemency for E. Howard Hunt, another of the Watergate defendants. Dean said he told Nixon about money demands being made by the Watergate defendants and that there was no money to pay. "He asked me how much it would cost." Dean said. I told him that I could only "HE TOLD ME that was no problem he also looked over at Haldeman and reported to the police." make an estimate, that it might be as high as a million dollars or more. But on April 15, said Dean, at another meeting the President said "that he had, of course, only been joking when he made that comment . . . the most interesting thing that happened during the conversation was, very near the end, he get up out of his chair, went behind his chair to the corner of the room, and there, just barely audible tone said to me he was probably foolish to have discussed Hunt's clemency with Colson." Dean said he decided that he was "being set up" to take the heat for the cover-up and that he went to federal prosecutors to tell them his story. NOW Chapter Debates Structure The central issue at the recent regional conference of the National Organization for Women (NOW), according to State Coordinator Bonnie Patton, was whether NOW should have state organizations or whether troopers should remain the most powerful. Patton attended the three-day regional conference at Rockford, III., and reported the results to the local NOW chapter at a meeting Monday night. Patton said she thought a state organization with a state of state officers should be able to respond. too much bureaucracy." National rules now state that all policy come from local sources. A state coordinator was not elected at the regional conference, she said, and according to a national rule, the coordinator must be an official at or at a state conference within 6 months. A meeting will be held at Manhattan Saturday to select a temporary state coordinator who will preside until a state conference is held in the fall. Patton said. Each NOW group, whether or not an actual chapter, is eligible to send one or two delegates to select a temporary coordinator, she said. The central duties of the state coordinator are to assist in the for-mer administration and to encourage liaison between chanters. The local chapter plans to shorten a slide show entitled "The Beginnings of a Long and Real Revolution" and rent it to interested groups. The show, made in New York, now consists of 200 slides and a tape or script to be used with it. ON APRIL 15, Dean said he was summoned into the President's office. Nixon asked him to submit a request either a letter of resignation or a request for indefinite leave of absence. THE SAME AFTERNOON, Dean said he was called into the President's office again, and at that time "told him I would not resign unless Haldenman and Ehrlichman resigned. I told him that I was not willing to house House scapegoat for the Watergate. "He said that he understood my position and he wasn't asking to me be a capacegoat." The hearings were adjourned until 9 a.m. Lawrence time today. In other Watergate-related events, Rep. Paul N. McCloskey called Monday night for immediate inquiry on whether the President should be impached. MCLOSKEY, D-CALIF., said that the President violated his oath to uphold the Constitution by, according to the President's May 22 statement, authorizing a 1970 plan for burglary of foreign high priority secrets. Dean said he refused. "The President was directly granting to the intelligence agencies of the U.S. government and particularly the FBL, the authority and implicit direction to conduct acts which were not only illegal but were unconstitutional." McCleasky asserted. He said the plan violated the Constitution's 4th Amendment guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures. MCLOSKEY SAID in a floor speech he agreed the House should not even discuss impeachment of the President until investigation of whether it was warranted is completed by the House Judiciary Committee. "But let us get that investigation under wav," he said. The Western White House said Monday that President Nixon "is fully aware of what is taking place" at the Senate Watergate hearings but will have no comment this week on the testimony by his ousted counsel, Dean. Refreshing Charm In Kids' Definitions Vicki Landman of Lawrence, NOW vice president, said that Mayor Nancy Hampton had recently expressed a concern about the public's comments on commissions and boards in Lawrence. Landman said of the 96 appointees, 16 were women. The group plans to prepare a statement to be presented at a City Commission meeting. The women will be appointed when vacancies arise. By JACK SMITH The Los Angeles Times Among the obvious gifts that my family were unable to give me for Father's Day was a dictionary. I price dictionary theses at 10 dollars, goldfish, but I now have more than I need. The latest addition to my small but adequate collection was the compact edition of **The Book of Mysteries**, which that great landmark work is reduced to only two volumes. Each one weighs nine pounds, though, and the print is so small that it's almost impossible to magnifying glass comes with every set. I could have used, however, one of the iDocuments put together by pupils out at the Sharman Gaks Presbyterian Nursery school as gifts for their fathers on Father's Day. One of the teachers, Mary Dimaglio, teaches her pupils how to use dictionary. "We discuss what a dictionary is," she ex- tends. "We teach them give me words, and we look them up." Then Dimaggio gives the children words, and asks them to define them. "For the most part," I was told, she tries to use words they're familiar with or at least may have heard. Even if a youngster doesn't know the word, he'll usually bluff it out. Naturally, children's definitions are likely to be cutey. But sometimes they glow with insights into the adult world, and at times they are really hard it is to define anything at all. W. L. Pct G.B. 42 30 38 Chicago 49 30 492 Monteul 33 35 485 St. Louis 33 35 485 Philadelphia 33 35 485 New York 31 36 463 Pittsburgh 31 36 463 EMBARRASSING: When you're un- undressed and somebody's almost there. When somebody loves you. . . You do something wrong at a party. ACCIDENT: Whenever you did something that your mother doesn't like what you did. CHEAP: It's like when you’re a millionaire. A bird. You don't have to give the store man all your money. It goes baaa. Hillcrest Shopping Center ★★ Carryout Available West Los Angeles 47 26 644 --- 51 Houston 42 32 644 --- 59 San Francisco 42 32 644 --- 59 Cincinnati 30 34 521 9 --- 1 Atlanta 30 42 521 9 --- 1 San Diego 23 23 335 24 --- 1 FREE COPY OF DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE WITH PURCHASE OF SHAKE! NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. PET G.B. New York 40 36 128 Milwaukee 57 36 128 Baltimore 37 32 128 Boston 34 32 128 Detroit 34 32 97 4 Cleveland 34 32 128 (21) AMERICAN LEAGUE East | State | Won | Lost | Draw | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Chicago | 36 | 30 | 545 | | Kansas City | 40 | 34 | 543 | | California | 30 | 24 | 543 | | Oakland | 38 | 34 | 528 | | Minnesota | 38 | 34 | 528 | | Tennessee | 35 | 32 | 528 | | Texas | 35 | 32 | 528 | Results Cleveland 4, New York 2 Boston 2, Detroit 1 Chicago 3, Cleveland 1 Baltimore 4, Milwaukee 3, 12 innings Atlanta 5, Chicago 3, California 3, Kansas City 2 Pittsburgh 8, Montreal 6, 1st Montreal 8, Montreal 1, 2nd Chicago 7, Cleveland 4, Chicago 3, New York 2 Houston 13, Cincinnati 4 Philadelphia 10, Baltimore 5 The group also discussed the possibility of having consciousness-raising groups next McDonald's red, white and blue shakes are just about as patriotic as the Declaration of Independence! And right now, we're giving a copy of this historical document to every customer who buys a patriotic shake now through March 25th. We're offering McDonald's red and blue's for blueberry, our new fun flavor! Get a taste of history **and** a great shake at McDonald's today! THE BALL PARK FREE Sausage Night buy 2 hot or mild smoked sausage sandwiches get 1 FREE Tuesday only 6 p.m. - midnight ANALOGY: You sneeze and stuff. ATTACK: A thing you hang on. BLINDER: It knocks your brakes out. ATTACK: A ting you hang on. BLUNDER: It makes your house wet. EXTINCT: When something's not working. FOSSIAL! It makes hot water come out of it . . . The wet sand and top on top of it like a dead fish or a dead man it turns into a fire that rises up and the man doesn't even know it. FRIEND: A girl or boy friend and when you get near them you do stuff. FLORIST: Puts the floor on. FUN: Is walking up a slide in tennis shoes. FAMILY A thing you love win... where animals and people live together. GERM: Like someone breathes at you. MOISTURE: My sister found a moisture in her hair. The tour will follow 18th Street east to Kentucky Street, north to 17th Street, west to 16th Street, south to Iowa Street and across Iowa Street to Peterson Road then west to Martin Park. Lunch or refreshments may be brought by the participants. A rest period is scheduled for the park and the tour should return to the high school about 4 p.m. NATURE: God takes care of all things. PHARMACIST: Someone who works at a pharmacy. PROBLEM: Someone wants you to do what you don't want to do. Children must be 10 years old or accompanied by their parents. TROUBLE: When you get into your father's grease. . . You go to your room and stay for a year. . . It rains and you can't go out and your sister can. A second tour is being planned to Lakeview on July 15. In case of rain, postponement of the tour will be announced. TERMINATE: Someone comes and sprays around your house. A bike tour to Martin Park sponsored by the parks and recreation department and the M. Oread Bicycle Club, will leave at Lawrence High path parking lot. SURELY only letting yourself know. USE PHRASE! If you and you don't know what it is but you want it. Tour guides, provided by the Mt. Greed Bicycle Club, will bale bicycles for the tour. It would be a world full of dangers, like when you stepped on an attack or somebody breathed at you or the bug man came to terminate the house. It would be a world of machines, where the pharmacist's with apples or you found a Pearl in the moisture. And it would be a happy world in a house where people and animals lived together, and there would be no reason to worry about the TV going out, and the people were safe, because God takes care of all thins. For further information call the Parks and Recreation Dent, at 843-4600 From the results of these early encounters with the lures, illusions and pitfalls of the English language, we get a glimpse into the world and wonderfully distorted children's world. Park Dept. to Hold Bike Tour Sunday RIDICULOUS: All the people at the hotel where we went on vacation, Anyway, the children's definitions make as much sense as love means never having Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358 stereo components Grounded TEAC and present KIEF'S HOT SUMMER SALE 3 DAYS—JUNE 25,26,27 3 DAYS—JUNE 25.26.27 These reg. 2** $189 Odyssey SALE PIONEER SPEAKER SALE Diamond Needles reg. '99-109 $ 595 Don't Get Burned This Summer Kief's Consistently Has the Lowest Record Prices in Town Malls Shopping Center Lawrence, Kansas Discount Records