THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY JUNE 18,1973 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Sunken American Destroyer Traps Research Submarine KEY WEST, Fla. — Trapped by a scuttled destroyer 351 feet down in the Atlantic, four weakening men wait in a midget marine today while Navy divers race to rescue them before their air supply runs out. The civilian research submarine was snagged in the hulk of the World War II destroyer or in a cable extending from it. The trapped men had been thrown overboard and taken to the morder of the Key West Naval Base, said the two men in the rear section of the submarine may be in coma. He added: "I would say the situation at this time is probably critical." Several rescue devices had been rushed to the scene, including a new submarine rescue bell that was to get its first practical test. As the supply of oxygen drops, the risk of the men dying from carbon monoxide poisoning increases. LT. Christopher Hobson, a navigator who ported a rise in the carbon dioxide level, Navy officials said a rescue bell and two divers from San Diego, Calif., would descend in an effort to free the craft. Skvlab Sets Endurance Record HOUSTON—The Skylab 1 astronauts set the world space endurance mark early today, passing the record established two years ago in a Soviet mission that ended tragically. At 2:22 a.m. (Lawrence time), astronaut Charles Conrad JR., Dr. Joseph P. Kernin and Paul J. Weitz exceed the record of 23 days, 18 hours and 22 minutes in space set in 171 by the Soyuz I. Cosmonauts conrad. Conrad, Kernin and Weitz will have a total of 28 days, 48 minutes in space if their missions end on schedule Friday. Two Earthquakes Hit Japan TOKYO—A strong earthquake that churned up a small tidal wave hit northern Japan Sunday, injuring 23 persons, sinking fishing boats and flooding schools of homes. A second quake hit Hokkaido about 10 hours later, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage. The first quake was felt as far as south as Tokyo. The tidal wave, rising 4.9 feet, hit Hanasaki Port on Hokkaida and washed away about 250 tons of salmon in storage, and a total of 30,000 persons were evacuated to higher ground. Protestors Ask for Emigration WASHINGTON—Thousands of protesters gathered at the U.S. Capitol steps to urge Soviet Communist Party Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev to permit Jews to emigrate freely from the Soviet Union. The group remained peaceful throughout the two hour rally, and then marched to the ellipse near the White House. Both police and organizers estimated the crowd at 10,000 persons. Gandhi Travels to Canada BELGRADE—IADE's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi ended a three-day visit to Yugoslavia and left for Canada, next stop on her world tour with Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito. His other leaders, discuss issues in Algeria, and submit a schedule for September in Algeria, and other international and bilateral topics. Magazine Says Peace Certain BEIRUT, Lebanon—The Soviet Union and the United States have agreed on a way to achieve a Middle East settlement if Arab-Iraeli peace efforts fail, the weekly magazine Ad-Diar says. The magazine, quoting what it said were highly placed French diplomats, advised President Georges Pompidou of France of the U.S.-Soviet agreement suggested during the Iceland meeting with Pompiond that there be a four-power guarantee of the borders of the Middle East states directly involved in the Arab-Israeli conflict. Noisy Party Draws Police ST. PAUL, Mini...Policewoman responding to a neighbor's complaint of a hoary party, were asked by the host, "Who are you going to arrest for?" Govern Wendell Anderson, Atty. Gen. Warren Sapnaua and St. Paul Mayor Lawrence Cohen were among the 1,000 or so persons who jarmed the St. Paul mansion of Roger Christianson. He was giving a talk on an administrative side to Rep. Joseph Karth, D.-Minn. Christianson, and he turned the turnout Thursday evening nearly doubled his guest-list. "Just use me a 7-Up," one patrolman asked Christianson before leaving. Clouds May Hide Sun Today Nature, after its unduly harsh treatment of local residents over the weekend, appears to be unbending and forecasts say the weather's going to get better and better. Today, it's going to be pretty cloudy, and there is likelihood of thunderstorms over the week. Temperatures over clouds away. Temperatures may get as high as the low 90s and a spot of rain at night should clear the skies for tomorrow. With no set agenda, the discussions will range over world problems and relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. The special emphasis through the US-Soviet Summit Today WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon and Leonid I. Breznyne, the Soviet Communist party leader, morning and night at a round of summit at the White House. week-long sessions will be on seeking ways to limit nuclear offensives weapons and to Russians have been invited to swell the crowd greeting the 68-year-old Soviet leader upon his arrival by helicopter from Camp Chesapeake in the Catoctin Mountains of Maryland. Before brezneh is ushered into the Oval Office he will be accorded a respentant welcome on the South Lawn as well visit to this country officially begins. Several thousand Americans and resident Breeznew打来 Camp David after arriving in this country Saturday afternoon. Late Sunday he was joined for a while by Henry A. Kissinger, chief U.S. planner of Kansan Photo by BEN WEAVER After the big wind and the destruction it spread over the Lawrence area, it's time to pick up the pieces and tidy up. A city builder wrestles with heavy pieces of a fallen tree in the 1300 block of Kentucky St. See story and additional pictures, page 7. Dean to Reveal Watergate Story Behind Closed Committee Doors By MICHAEL PUTZEL Associated Press Writer The panel's vice chairman, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R- Tenn, predicted Sunday that Dean "will tell a rather complete story," hopefully unabridged by claims of executive privilege or an attorney-client relationship with President Nixon. At the committee's executive session, the senators are expected to consider national discussions with Nixon and many conversations with Nixon to determine what can be brought out publicly without exposing critical government secrets or risking his attorney without fear of disclosure. "The usual and traditional and historic role of attorney-client would not seem to obtain." Baker said, because Dean was a lawyer, and the client was an personal attorney retained by Nixon. BAKER, INTERVIEWED on the ABC broadcast "Issues and Answers", said he hoped the President would not invoke his relationship to block Dean's testimony. Various accounts indicate Dean may be the one man willing to talk to who could offer him advice. He was aware of the Watagegate report. Others say he can't, either because it isn't true or because Dean wasn't close enough to the President to know whether it was true or false. BUT DEAN'S TESTIMONY about the hydra-headed scandal is sure to be explosive. Federal prosecutors have said the case has been made "very profound kind of corruption" using his position of trust "to foster a pervasive scheme to obstruct justice." A GAY LIBERATION meeting is as soon as 7:30 tonight in the International Forum. THE JEAY BOWL will be open from 10 m. until 9 m. today at Kansas Union. "JULILUS CAESAR" will be presented at 8 tonight in the University Theatre. There will be refreshments and entertainment in the Murphy courtyard beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tickets for the play are $1 for students and $2 for non-students. Haldeman has denied any prior knowledge of the break-in a year ago and has insisted he had no knowledge of a coverup. Informed sources, however, have said Haldeman's side, Gordon Strachan, is prepared to swear—after he gains immunity for his testimony—that he relayed the bugging plans to his boss. Previous testimony has linked Dean to meetings at which plans to break into and bug Democratic headquarters in the mid-2010s. But the Press has learned that Dean is prepared to testify that then-presidential chief of staff H. R. Haldenman was aware of those plans THE NEW YORK Times and Time magazines quoted sources Sunday as saying Dean also is prepared to testify that the head of the "plumbers" group in the White But Krogh has said Nixon impressed on him the importance of his leak-plugging mission but didn't tell him to commit a crime in carrying his job. Egi Kilog, whom Nixon won to head a squad of men directed to plug national-security news leaks, has admitted he supervised the burglaries of files belonging to his psychiatrist in an effort to gain information from the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers. House told him orders for the Ellsberg burglary came "from the Oval Office" of Nixon said on May 22 that he didn't learn of the 1971 burial until this year. EARLER REPORTS have said Dean was prepared to say Nixon personally congratulated him for his role in covering up the Watergate affair and that the President said it would be no problem to raise $1 million. the summit conference. No details were given about the substance of their talks or about how Brezhnev spent his first days on American soil. But the immediate spotlight was on Monday's opening call at the White House. Secretary of State William P. Rogers, Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and Mayor Walter E. Washington will have prominent roles in ceremonies. Less conspicuous will be at least his guards guarding against the slightest incident. Breznev is due to arrive at 11:30 a.m. Lawrence time. By noon he and Nixon, Lawrence, will be available for discussions. They will confer with aides during a luncheon break and then work through the afternoon. Kissinger, the secretary of state, is expected to sit in part of the time. In the evening, the President hosts a black-tie state dinner for his guest. Brezhnev Visit Demonstrates Policy Changes By ROBERT G. KAISER The Washington Post/Outlook ... our plains are by no means aimed at autarky. We are not following a policy of isolating our country from the outside world." Leonid I. Brezhnev in Bonn, May 1973. Moscow—with those words in a speech on West German television last month, the leader of the Soviet Communist party put his personal and explicit imprimatur on one of the most fundamental and significant changes in world politics in a generation. Leonid I. Brezhnev has indeed led the Soviet Union away from antarky—the complete opposite of a free-moving overlanding goal—and toward an unprecedented level of interdependence with the outside world. This process has gone so far, so quickly, that Breznev is already personally committed to it as perhaps the single most important element of his policies. Interdependence—especially with the capitalists in the West and Japan—is even supposed to help Breznev solve many Soviet domestic problems. DESPITE HIS BEST efforts, and most ardent desires, the current confusion in American politics may force Breznev to accept a pause. But it is difficult to see how anything that could happen because of Watergate could alter the fundamentally This may explain why the Soviet leader was prepared to risk the hazardous political atmosphere in Washington created by the Soviet Union's engagement with President Nixon. Brezhnev may fear that any loss of momentum in these early stages of his new policy would cast doubts on the policy itself. He could get on with his new relationship with Nixon. See BREZHNEV, Back Page KU Prof Recounts Recent Japan Trip By DWIGHT HILPMAN And PRIS KAUFMAN The industrial benefits Kansas offers and recent promotional work of 35 Kansas have made the state a probable site for Japanese investment interests, Grant Goodman, professor of history and East Asian studies at KU, said last Thursday. The KU East Asian studies program was a topic of keen interest for the Japanese, he said. Goodman, who has an extensive background in Japanese culture, said that one of the concerns of Japanese businessmen who are considering U.S. economic development is American society. The fact that KU students are making an effort to learn about the Japanese language and culture is a reassuring source of pride to the Japanese. Goodman, a member of a Kansas delegation to the Japanese Reverse Investment Seminar, returned last week from cities, Tokyo and Osaka. The 35-member Kansas delegation, headed by Gov. Robert Docking and LG. Gov. Dave Owen, was the outgrowth of an intensive effort to encourage investment upon Kansas as an area for investment. GOODMAN SAID that the two-week trip would only establish initial contacts with Japanese businessmen. He said that final commitments would be reached only after prolonged contacts through visits in both directions. Benefits of the trip may already have begun. Docking called Goodman Thursday to invite him to a lunch later in the afternoon, and the munications firm Docking called a ‘hot prospect.’ Toyota Motors has promised to send a survey party to Kansas within two or three months. Goodman met Saturday with a Japanese businessman who was in Kansas to study an anti-pi device manufactured in Council A trade imbalance has fueled the effort to attract Japanese business to Kansas and other parts of the United States. The U.S. is far more than it exports to the Asian nation. During the trip to Japan, Docking and other Kansans made contacts with several large auto companies, trading firms and banks. Goodman, the only delegate fluent in Japanese, was an interpreter for most of the sessions. ALTHOUGH NO actual commitments have been made by Japanese businessman, Goodman said that he was certain that some of their investments would come to The Japanese want to balance the trade The Kansas delegation was the largest group sent by any of the more than 30 states participating in the seminar. Docking was the only governor who made the trip to Japan, and he and L. Gov. Were were two others whose organizations accompanying their state delegations. THE PRESENCE of the state's two highest officers made a tremendous impression on the Japanese, said Goodman. Docking, 46, and Owen, 34, also impressed them as being exceptionally young for their offices. situation, Goodman said. He said their main concern was locating in areas of the country that would be most suitable for their needs. Thus, the recent efforts by Kansas and other states to attract Japanese business have become crucial. Some of the features emphasized by Docking in his talks about Kansas were the need for facilities for distribution and warehousing, credit availability and the oil and gas reserves. Docking also said that Kansas had good labor-management relations and few Goodman also said that although several other states had prepared advance information sheets about their respective conditions, they were the only ones prepared in Jamaican. Kansas labor productivity is 5 per cent above the national average, Docking said. The Japanese labor productivity is also very high. DOCKING SAID that credit would be readily available to Japanese investors. He cited the recent Free Trade Zone law and the Industrial Revenue Bonds act, which enabled communities to build facilities for industry, as additional assets. The Japanese do business differently than the Americans. Goodman said. The See PROF RECOUNTS, Back Page