THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY JUNE 19,1973 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Watergate Hearings Postponed Until Brezhnev Leaves U.S. WASHINGTON — The Senate Watergate committee has postponed its hearings because of the state visit of the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. The postponement was made to prevent John W. Dean III, from testifying during the visit about possible links between President Nixon and Russian officials. Now, both leaders begin today were to be covered simultaneously by all three TV networks. Dean, who has already received limited immunity for any testimony he gives, has reportedly told investigators, behind closed doors, that Nixon was aware of efforts to cover the Watergate breakthrough. In the months ahead there will be increasing public interest in such a possibility; 67 per cent of the groups involved to some degree. Astronauts to Spacewalk Todav HOUSTON—The Skylar astronauts are to take another space walk today to recover film that may include the first solar flare ever photographed by a manned telescope from orbit. The three-hour spacewalk, set to start at 6:40 a.m. Lawrence time, is their fourth and final mission of the year on Friday. The photographs of the solar flare are expected to provide invaluable information about nuclear fusion processes on the sun. Fired KU Aide to Get Hearing DENVER—The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ordered a lower court to give Gary D. Jackson a new hearing in his attempt to bring his dismissal as a University of Kansas assistant dean of men before the Kansas Board of Regents. Jackson was fired in July 1970 after it was alleged that he brought ammunition into Lawrence the day before a judge ordered him to appear at the District Court in Kansas City had ruled that Jackson had no right to a hearing before the Regents. The Denver decision Saturday requires the Kansas City court to reconsider its decision. Pearson to Eat with Brezhnev WASHINGTON—Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., will attend a luncheon Tuesday with Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev at the request of the Soviet ambassador. Pearson, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, will be one of about 20 senators at the luncheon. Pearson traveled to the U.S.S.R. in April for discussion of East-West trade and met with Brezhnev and other Soviet leaders. K.O. Ends Heavyweight Fight It should be cooler today than usual, with day temperatures rising only to the low 80s. Plenty of sun is forecast, but partly cloudy conditions also allow a day from getting to be a really warm one. Lows tonight may touch down to the 50s, and we should be getting increasingly playful winds as the day progresses. Sun will may even take the clouds away and turn it into a clear, sunny day. NEW YORK—Ernie Shaver floored Jimmy Ellis last night with a thundering right uppercut in the first round of a scheduled 12-round fight at Madison Square Garden. Shaver's sensational victory came moments after he was on the verge of being knocked out himself. This wins place Shaver in the race for a shot at heavyweight champion George Foreman. Soldiers Hunt Irish Extremists BELFAST—British security forces have mounted a massive hunt for members of a splinter group of Protestant extremists who claimed responsibility for reprisal murders of two Roman Catholics. "They are obviously a determined and, from what we can gather, a well drilled bunch of men," a British army spokesman said. "They could create havoc if they are not stopped soon." The men had telephoned Belfast newspapers over the weekend to say they were members of the Ulster Freedom Fighters. The slayings brought to 826 the number of persons reported killed in four years of strife. Kansas Wheat Cutting Begins GREAT BEND — The 1973 Kansas wheat harvest is gathering steam as cutting began Monday at Caldwell, Coldwater, Kiowa, Pratt and Wellington and test cutting began at Ashland. The harvest will be in full sawing by Wednesday with cutting at Anthony, Ashland, Kingman, Minneapolis and Milwaukee the harvest would then begin to move north with cutting expected by the weekend around Great Bend, Minnesota, Ellsworth and Salina. Officer's Attackers Plead Guilty LEAENVORTH—Four men pleaded guilty Monday to charges or battery on a police officer in connection with a racial disturbance earlier this month. The disturbance started as a Leavenworth policeman tried to arrest a black man for reckless driving and led to a Kansas Bureau of Investigation inquiry into Leavenworth police methods. Cooler Temperatures Expected Brezhnev-Nixon Talks Begin WASHINGTON—President Nixon and Soviet Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev began their summit conference Monday with mutual pledges to build world peace. They ended the day extolling the United States and the Soviet Union. Peace on Earth Pledged "We have laid the groundwork for a significant improvement in our relations" with Brezney at a black-tie dinner at the White House. The Soviet guest, on his first visit to the United States and his second trip to the summit with Nixon, responded: "The peoples are expecting a great deal from our new meeting. And I believe it is our desire to live up to those expectations." NIXON and Brezhnev began the week of summit talks by discussing world problems for nearly four hours. Working through the lunch hour, the two leaders talked on "a philosophical plane" about maintaining the momentum established when the President visited Washington for the first summit meeting and reached an agreement to limit defensive nuclear weapons. Brehhnev, in his toast, reassured other Kansas Staff Photos by DRIC BRANNEVEN KU Alumni, Faculty and Fans Enjoyed the Royals' Game on 'Jayhawk Night' nations, apparently including China, that they would not suffer in the growing detente between the United States and the Soviet Union. "It is absolutely clear to anyone who is at least slightly familiar with the course of events and with the nature of development with Soviet-American relations, that their improvement in no way prejudices the interest of any third country," he said. Big KU Turnout Sees K.C. Lose BREZHNEV also said the development of By GERALD EWING See BREZHNEV, Page Two KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Over, 1,800 University of Kansas alumni, faculty and students present for Monday's "Kansas Jayhawk Night" at the new Royals Stadium watched the Oakland Athletics defeat the Kansas City Rovals 9-5. The A's firepower was supplied by left-fielder Joe Rudi, who driwed in four runs with a pair of doubles. The highlight of the evening for the Royals was first-baseman John Maybury's towering 245-foot home, which scored three of the Royals five times in the second half blast in the new stadium, gave him the league lead in home runs with 17. of the KU Alumni Association, the original plan called for only 300 to 300 people to attend. The Royals were plagued all evening by poor pitching, giving up eight walks, six of "I'm extremely pleased with the response we got," Blitta said. "We had a fantastic response, particularly from KU faculty and staff." Two of the people who enjoyed the evening the most were Chancellor and Mrs. Raymond Nichols. Nichols said that except for the fact they played everything associated with the game. joyable, low-key key that provided a good evening for the family." "This is the first game I've been to in the new stadium," Nichols said. "It certainly is a beautiful stadium and I'm impressed by the number of faculty who came to the game." The response to "Kansas Jayhawk Night," which was sponsored by the City College of New York and the Alumni Association, was incredible. According to Vince Bilotta, associate director AN EXHIBITION and sale of original graphics by artists including Chagall, Baskin, Ronault, Daumier, Mautselse and Lichtenberg. The exhibition is in the south lounger of the Kansas Union. Bilotta complimented The Kansas City Royals Organization for helping make "Kansas Jayhawk Night" a memorable occasion. "We sold almost 1,700 tickets through our office and over 100 tickets here at the hotel." Regardless of the outcome of the game, the fans from KU enjoyed themselves. They were entertained by the playing of the KU Fight Song and the National Anthem as recorded by the Jayhawk Marching Band. Also featured were the Jayhawk mascot to Royals players to Royals catcher Fran Healy and a post-game party at the Royalts Stadium Club. "The Royals have been good to us. They're very cooperative and helped a great deal in setting the whole thing up," Bilbita said. "THE MAN WHO Had His Hair Cut Short" will be shown at 7 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. Admission is 75 cents. SAU IS SPONSORING a volleyball game at 7 am in South Park, 12th and 13st. THE POLITICAL ACTION committee of the KU Commission on the Status of Women will meet at 7 tonight in Parlor A of the Union. Plans for the study of possible sexism in the Lawrence School District will be open. The meeting is open to the public. Two Vietnams Talk of Peace; Killing Goes On SAIGON (AP)- South Vietnamese and Viet Cong representatives remained deadlocked in a cease-fire meeting Monday while the shooting and bloodied continued A helicopter of the International Commission of Control and Supervision was fired at near Pleuka over territory occupied by both the Viet Cong and Saigon forces. The craft was not hit and there were no casualties. Two other peacekeepers helicopters were fired on Sunday near An Loc over Viet Cong-controlled areas. A bullet pierced a rotor of an aircraft but out there were no injuries to those aboard. Scattered ground skirmishes went on for the 138th day of the original cease-fire and the fourth day of the renewed truce that the opposing sledges piled in Paris to honor. The Joint Military Commission, composed of representatives of the Saigon Army, conducted a report on reported progress in implementing the 14 point communique signed last week by Henry A. Kisinger and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam to reinforce the cease-fire and halt conflict. In Washington, a proposal to cut off funds for U.S. bombing in Cambodia and Laos was sent to the House floor Monday for a vote. The vote could become final congressional action. Two Men Still in Sub Appear Lifeless KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)—Recusers slowly decompressing a chamber of a midget submarine that had been trapped underwater, the officers said. "We see no signs of life from the two men inside." "There's no indication of any change this morning," Navy Cmdr. Joseph Neville said at an early morning briefing, conducted after 13 hours of chamber decompression. "Presumably, they are still ventilating the chamber. It's a medical decision as to when they open it, and they have not done so. "They can only see a small portion of what appears to be one man's back." Neville added that rescuers had no other way of determining the condition of the two divers. Two other men in a forward chamber were pulled safely from the civilian research minisub Sea Link as soon as it surfaced Monday. when divers breathe air under high pressure, they must be decompressed slowly to prevent nitrogen bubbles from forming in the bloodstream. Nevile said a tug was sent to help the submarine rescue ship USS Tringa disgasse from her four-point mooring at Port-au-Prince and dived, 15 miles southeast of Key West. He said the Tringa was expected at the Navy base here by 11 a.m. Lawrence time, 'and if the Tringa moves, I expect they'll open it' in 'about opening the minibus's chamber.' The Tringa has been providing support systems for the decompression effort aboard the minisub's mother ship, the Sea Diver. Sprawled on the deck of the six-foot chamber were Clayton Link, 31, the son of the research sub's designer, millionaire John McClure, who Storver Slover, a veteran Navy submariner. Listed in excellent condition aboard the submarine rescue ship USS Tringa were marine biologist Robert Meek, 27, of Santa Barbara, Calif., and Archibald "Jock" Menzies, 30, of Vero Beach, Fla., pilot and commander of the sub. The 21-foot submarine was being decompressed aboard its mother ship, the Sea Diver. Link's father, who revolutionized aviation with a simulated flight trainer that bears his name, and wife, Maurie, waited for only inches away from the young explorer. The Sea Link was smared Sunday morning in cables on a scuttled World War II destroyer, the Fred T. Berry, at a depth of 351 feet. After five unsuccessful attempts to free While Link's father and wife waited, Link's sister and her nieces arrived from California and Montana. the Sea Link, rescues on the Tringa ripped away the cables that trapped the Sea Link. A giant grappling hook was guided into position by an underwater television camera controlled from the commercial research ship A. B. Wood. flew by helicopter to the Tringa for a reunion with their husbands. Mrs. Stover was secluded in a Key West motel. KYLE, S.D. — A leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM) says the United States will have "an unhappy birthday" with its new law requiring improvements in national Indian affairs. Russell Means, testifying Sunday before a Senate subcommittee on Indian affairs, said the United States has decided Dakota, but the leadership of AIM in the state has decided to give the United States and the white man another chance to walk the way Indian affairs are handled. Obervers aboard the Sea Diver in the senior link, who built the minibus in his boyard, paced the deck and relayed industrial equipment during the efforts to raise the Sea Link. "He's a tough old man," an observer said. The subcommittee, chaired by Sen. James Aborezek, D-S.D., is holding a reception in Restoration town. Nearby is Woundene Kree, a town taken over by AIM-Indians and held during a confrontation with federal law enforcement personnel that lasted 70 years. Leader Predicts Trouble Unless Indians Appeased "The United States has failed in trying to show us how to govern ourselves," he said. "We want to return to treaty government because Indians then made their choice of government. We certainly can't do as bad as the United States has done for us. "On July 4, 1976, white America is planning to celebrate its 200th birthday." Means said. "If nothing has changed for the past five years, we will make sure it is an unhappy birthday." "We feel the government can put into Indian affairs the same effort it put into Vietnam, the United Nations and other countries," he said in aspects that have been denied Indians." He added, "indians all over the country are waking up. The bureaucratic government, with the Bureau of Indian Affairs as its puppet tribal government, is a failure. It is a vicious failure because it is a police state. Free the American Indian from this system is our responsibility. Means said the situation at the Pine Ridge Reservation "is as bad as before the takeover of Wounded Knee, and it only takes a small investment more reason to put their life on the line. AIM members and supporters took over the village to dramatize demands for an investigation of the reservation's tribal government. They also demanded the tribe an 1863 treaty which they claim, gave the Sioux half of South Dakota t. the Sioux. Aboutzk said the hearings were an attempt to gather ideas from Indians on what changes Congress should consider to improve conditions. Slaying, Bombs Rip Okla. City OKLAHAMA CITY (AP) — Firearms and firebombs left one person dead and a department store destroyed Monday in the night of violence that appeared to be racial. Police said they could not establish any connection, however, between the violence and a confrontation Sunday afternoon between police and Black Muslims. Officers said they had no suspect and indicated little hope of identifying the at- Five persons were shot and firebombs hit a C. R., Anthony store, the National Cowboy Hall of Fame, Northeast High School and a small grocery store. See FIREBOMBS, Page Two 07