Thursday, June 2 1, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Dean testimony ties Nixon to earlier Tuition hike, As reported recently in The Daily, the Regents will be asked to. adopt new resi- dency rules for students to be effective for the summer half-term, University President Robben Fleming said Tuesday night. The rules would provide for vari- ous criteria in determining resident sta- tus for tuition purposes with decisions made case by case. Fleming will also ask the Regents to raise tuition "substantially above the five to seven per cent increase approved tentatively last spring." Flem- ing is acting in response to a U. S. Su- preme Court ruling Monday which effec- tively invalidated the University's resi- dencv criteria. FDA takes action WASIINGOtN -- In the face of rising consamer injiry reports, the Food and Drag Administration yesterday proposed that feminine deodorant sprays be re- q'iired to carry he: ith warning 1[bels. The agency said it knows of no medicinal or hygenic vahie of the sprays. The l't)A received nameruis complaints of itching, burning, blistering and urinary infections :ft 'r the sprays vere used. Consumers aid the deodolr-at ind''strs have 60 days to comment on the pronosed regiition before the F1-tA makes a final decision. Riots in Chile SANTIAGO, Chile - Riot police battled thousands of President Salvador Allende's opponents in the streets Tuesday night at the end of a demonstration demanding settlement of a strike at the world's l rg- est 'inderground copper mine. Police hurl- ecd tear 'gas at rack-throwiiig demonstra- tors in a 45-minute melee along the capi- t,"l's main stiedt Happenings .. LeLouche's "A man and a woman" will be featured by the A2 Film Co-op at Aud A, 7:30 and 9:30. The Residential College Summer Theatre will be perform- ing their original musical comedy "The Banana from Outer Space" at the RC Aud., S p.m. . . . You can also catch "The Wizard of (ii" and "200 Motels" at MLB, 8:15 for the double feature, or 10 p.m. for the single. A2's weather Shine on brightly. A pleasant day with the sun shining through and around scat- tered clouds. High temps ranging from 70 to 75 with lows between 52-57. Watergate coverup WASHINGTON --John Dean III has told Senate investi- mony to Senate investigators that Itoover told the President gators that the White House, on orders from President Nixon, that Nixon had been the subject of electronic eavesdropping successfully torpedoed a congressional investigation of the in the t% presidential campaign. Watergate affair before last year's presidential election. An official summary of Dean's testimony at a closed-door THERE WERE no details on the alleged 1968 buggiag session with the Senate Watergate committee last Saturday incident in the summary of Dean's talk with Senate Watergate says the fired White House counsel reported: committee staff members last Saturday. "Nixon said William Timmons should get on the Patman The fired White House counsel was describing a meeting hearings and make sure it didn't get out of hand . . . White he attended with Nixon and presidential chief of staff H. R. House and the Committee for the Re-election of the President Haldeman last Sept. 15, according to the official summary blocked Patman hearings by bringing pressure on people to which gave this account: vote against subpoenaing witnesses." "Dean met with the President after the indictments had REP. WRIGHT PATMAN (D-Tex.), chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, last year wanted the com- mittee to conduct a full-scale investigation of the June 17, 1972 break-in at Democratic headquarters. Timmons at the time was a White House lobbyist with Congress. Dean also told investigators that Nixon said at a meeting last September that he once told FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover he might use wiretapping against political opponents. Nixon is quoted as saving in a summary of Dean's testi- been handed down. Nixon said Haldeman reported what a good job Dean had done. "NIXON SAID that Hoover had told him that Nixon had been bugged in the 1968 eampaign, and Nixon said that some- time in the future they would have to use it to their advantage." The summary obtained by a reporter did not elaborate on this point but, a Senate source said Dean had testified the conversation referred to future use of bugging. Asked about the report, a White House spokesman repeated See DEAN, Page 10 John Mitchell John Dean Il Robert Vesco A jatA By KATHLEI The second of a three- iia's siwntini the Wiasb You lie on your cot I til your back begins springs and you can't g way you turn. So you the porthole at the cloc 'twenty five minutes the matron brought y minutes and it seem Rebecca sees you stan and says, "It passes sl stand to hear that clo away." You turn around to AN INSIDER'S VIEW night in the %ounty EN RICKE she's already walked back to the tele- some. Four hands shoot out and she spills -part series on two vision and sat down. the aspirins into the open palms. htenaw CouiityJ You start to follow, but the keys start You hang back because your head only for a log time, un- to ache from the jingling in the corridor and someone says, sort of hurls and you know it's froc ;et comfortable any "Here she comes, I swear I never seen smoking too many cigarettes and thinking get up and look out her come up here so much in one night." too much. dk. The matron turns her key in the lock. The matron has also brought a TV have passed siice You panic because you're the closes one guide; Rebecca thanks her for it and ou in. Twenty five to the door, and she sees you first, and . .. sticks it between the bars of her cell and ed like all night But she just says hello and that she smiles. ding at the porthole brought the aspirin. When the matron leaves everyone sinks ow don't it. I can't The bottle opens as the women gather back to the ls andthe dull quiet returns ck, ticking my life around. "I's hurtin', Susan, gimme three "That Susan, she ain't tii bad," one of them aspirins, please." woman says, and you think abiitt that. When the turnkey is in the room you can't say something but She smiles and asks who else wants feel the hostility like you can when she's gone. It's almost like feeling sweet toward your parents and at the same time wishing they were dead because of their men fi re i nt poiwer over you. Hut it's more than that. Even if Susan is cool, she's still the turnkey-she's still the jail, and that's what you hate. ro n r tu rn And it's almost like hating yourself because you know when you get iiit that Peron. return 333 things aren't really gonna be ouch dif- ir the international were fired into the crowd from a clump ferent. You're just gonna be older, and dusk as hundreds of trees 300 yards from the speaker's tireder, and living right where you were nists started back stand. Peronist security guards returned when you came in. the fire and charged into the trees. Your mind gets real tired from think- president, Hector Instead of watching 18,000 doves re- ing so you sit down on the mat, lean arriving with the leased-a gesture planned to honor Peron's your head back against the bars and ar that the fighting peaceful return after 18 years of exile-- watch with the others as the lines buzz its who are against spectators found themselves in a hail of across the tv screen. bullets. It finally seems like enough time has nbattles that left PERON WAS toppled by a military coup passed to go to bed-at least that's what d appeared to in- in 1955 after nine years of rule with everyone else is doing. So you go back roups. Peronists in dictatorial powers. He has been living in to your cell and lie on your cot, with Marxist guerrilla exile in Spain, and his followers were your head near the bars because the nged gunfire that prohibited by the military from putting other end is right next to the toilet. ul return from 18 up a presidential candidate until this year. The light. is glaring through your This return to Argentina is his second closed eyelids and making your head and then shots in the last six months. See TWO, Page 8 t r c i f t t ,r Argentine gun crowd awaiting BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (A)-Gun- Sporadic shooting nea men opened fire in the throng of two airport continued after million that waited yesterday to welcome of thousands of Peroi Juan Peron back to Argentina. Scores fell toward the capital. dead or wounded, and Peron landed at The new Peronist another airport. Campora, said after Police reported at least 13 dead and former Argentine leade 250 wounded in the gunfire near Ezeiza was started by "elemen International Airport, where the former our nation." Argentine president's chartered jet was TWO EARLIER gu to have landed. Doctors tending the vic- three persons woundei tins said the death toll could go to 50. volve rival Peronist gi PERON, en route from exile in Madrid, the crowd blamed a put down at a military air base several group for the proloi miles away. He canceled his public ap- spoiled Peron's peacef pearance, but was t make a broadcast years in exile, speech last night, the government said. There was scuffling