9. tot Si~ ')A .10-YA T 4P NAI- 11 E uesuuy, iNuvemriur t.'.., v i-r 1 t 1C IV%(\r 1 ..'Iil1N L. J- i1_ tocge-z nree Kissinger, ChIou meet, Sugar makers reap 'big 'windfall gains' promise rapprochement By AP and Reuter PEKING - Secretary of State Henry Kissinger called on ailing Premier Cou En-lai last night and later exchanged toasts with other Chinese leaders. Both sides promised further im- provement in relations between Washington and Peking. The meeting lasted 30 min- utes and took place in the hos- pital where the 76-year-old Chou has been a patient for over four months, a Chinese spokesperson said. Reliable sources said the two men recalled their previous meetings when they were the principle architects in forging the Washington-Peking rap- prochement. KISSINGER, who flew here from the Viadivostock summitI meeting of President Ford and 'Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev,1 also planswto brief the Chinese on the new U.S.-Soviet nuclear arms understanding. "In the last years the rela- tions between our two countries have moved ahead steadily," Kissinger said in a banquet toast. "I am here to continue this process and I am confident it will succeed." Chinese Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua declared: "CHINA and the United States have different social sys- tems, and there are differences; between us on a series of mat- ters of principle. But this does not hinder us from finding com- mon ground on certain mat- ters." On the way to the Great Hall of the People for dinner, the secretary of state. stopped at a rest home for his visit with Chou, who is not well. Kissing- er described him as "bright and alert." Chou fell ill in early May and it was learned in early July, when he received visiting Amer- ican Senator Henry Jackson, that he was in the hospital. Since then he has received a number of foreign visitors, but the meetings have mostly been brief and confined to an ex- change of greetings. NANCY Kissinger missed the banquet because, her husband said, she had an upset stomach. But his children, Elizabeth, 15, and David, 13, were at the head table to join in the toasts with mao tai, a potent Chinese bran- dy. "Ganbei" - or bottoms up in English-Foreign Minister Chi- ao Kuan-hua said to David, who smiled and sipped. "Are you drinking mao tais?" Kissinger asked with mock sternness. The boy did not ans- wer. BETWEEN courses of fried salmon cakes, shark's tail soup and roast pork, a military band played such old American favor-f ites as "Shenandoah" and "Home on the Range."j This is Kissinger's seventh visit to Peking but his first in a little more than a year. For- eign Minister Chiao and Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping were at the airport when the Ameri- can party flew in from Tokyo late yesterday afternoon. The visit, to last until Friday, was announced in "People's Daily" several days ago. Other- wise no apparent notice was taken of his arrival. The mo- torcade moved uneventfully through darkened streets and past lighted factories. KISSINGER told the dinner guests the opening to China wasE "one of the most significant in-_ itiatives of American foreign policy." He said it "has not been a matter of expediency but a fixed principle of Ameri- can foreign policy." Without mentioning former President Richard N i x o n by name, he said there have been "some changes in the United States" since his last visit. "But," he added, "it was no accident that the new American president saw your ambassador the first day in office and that he reaffirmed in a statement the principles of the Shanghai com- munique and that he would con- tinue the normalization of rela- tions with the People's Republic of China." WASHINGTON (,P) - Rapidly rising prices on new sugar have produced "very large windfall, gains" for all sectors of the industry, an analysis by the Council of Wage and Price Sta- bility indicated yesterday. The staff study, presented on the first day of a two-day hear-: ing into the quadrupling of the price of sugar this year, showed that "net returns per unit of sugar for both the production and processing segments of the domestic sugar cane and sugar beet industries are much higher in 1974 than in any year in re- cent history." That report by Bruce Walter was presented after Treasury Secretary William Simon opened the hearings by stating that his investigation has found "no evidence of a conspiracy" be- tween the Soviet Union and some of the Arab nations "to hoard or drive up the price of sugar. That is one idea we can dismiss immediately," despite large recent orders forsugar for those countries. SIMON SAID the hearings were called because "we are determined to get to the bottom of the rising controversy over sugar prices." The secretary said that a ma, jor cause of the problem is the fact that world consumption of sugar has exceeded production for four consecutive years, de- pleting inventories and pushing up prices. But, he said, that explanation is incomplete. The role of spec- ulators, the actual production situation, rumors of commercial hoarding of sugar "whether the sugar companies are reaping excessive profits from this sit- uation" need to be examined. "THE AMERICAN housewife deserves to know what lies be- hind these stupendous price in- creases. She has a right to know whether she's getting a fair shake or just a shakedown. And that's what we intend to find out," Simon said. Virginia Knauer, the President's special assistant for consumer affairs, said a princi- pal confusion in consumers' minds results from the role of government programs and trade restraints when the price rise is being explained in terms of free-market supply and demand forces. "This question of contrived versus real scarcity to me is the most important area this hear- ing can shed light on," she said. Publishers slapped with monopoly suit WASHINGTON (A) - The Jus- tice Department filed a civil antitrust suit against 21 major American publishing companies yesterday charging them with conspiring to illegally divide world book markets. The suit was filed in U. S. District Court in New York City. Named as defendants were: Addison - Wesley Publishing Co., of Reading, Mass.; Bantam Books of New York City; Co- lumbia Broadcasting System of New York; Dell Publishing Co. of New York; Doubleday & Co. of Garden City, N.Y.; Grosset & Dunbar of New York; Har- court Brace Jovanovich of New York; Harper & Row of New York; Houghton Mifflin of Bos- ton; Intext Inc., of Scranton, Pa.; Litton Education and Pub-; lishing of New York; MacMil- Ian Inc. of New York; McGraw- Hill of New York; Oxford Uni- versity Press of New York; Pen- guin Books of Baltimore; Pren- tice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs,: N.J.; Random House of New York; Simon & Schuster of New York; the Times Mirror Co. of Los Angeles; thedViking Press of New York; and John Wiley & Sons of New York. THE PUBLISHERS Associa- tion, a British organization cov- ering virtually all major pub- lishing houses in the United: Kingdom, was named as cocon- suirator but not as a defendant. The individual publishing houses were also named as coconspira- tors but not defendents. The suit charges that since 1947 the publishers have oper- ated under agreements which allotted exclusive marketing ter- ritories throughout the world: except in certain areas designat- ed "open territory." The publisher are also accus- ed of monitoring the allocation agreements and making efforts to suppress breeches, the suit said. 1 s ' $i, $1 THE JUSTICE Department said the U. S. export of books totals more than $250 million an-: nually and the United Kingdom is the largest foreign market for books published in the Unit- ed States. The United Kingdom exports more than $165 million in books annually. The antitrust action charges that whenever a copyrighted book published in the UnitedI States by one of the named companies was also to be pub- lished in Great Britain, the American company would grant a license to the publishing house in the United Kingdom. Such a license usually would give the British publisher the exclusive right to publish, dis- tribute or' sell the book in the British Traditional Market. In1 return the British publisher would agree not to market the1 bnk inthe UnitA& dtt t ni AP Photo SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger shak es hands with Chinese Premier Chou En-lai yesterday at a hospital shortly after Kissinger arrived in Peking. Kissinger described the ail- ing Chou, who is 76, as "bright and alert." STRONGEST STA Vatican VATICAN CITY (k') - The. Vatican said yesterday that abortion can never be justified - even when the mother's life{ is in danger or the child could be abnormal. The pronounce- ment singled out the responsi- bilities of women on the issue. THE MICHIGAN DAILY VoueLXXXV, N.71 TEMENT EVER: Tuee Nov is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage o n paidatAnn Arbor, Michigan 48106. proclaimis ab r o, Publihshed daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription ept rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); j $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mal (other states and foreign). cthe is- change nature, nor can one ex- Summer session published Tues- can pronouncement on day through Saturday morning. sue. It listed the most signifi- empt women, any more than Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier cant demands of abortion advo- men, for what nature demands (campus area); $6.00 local mail cates only to reject them all. on them." (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- "It may be a serious ques- The documents said all free- tion of health, someimes of life doms, including sexual free- or death, for the mother; it may dom, have a natural limitation O " be the burden represented by in the rights of other people, G L~i write: CHRISTIAN INFORMATION SERVICE".aPst) IS THERE A PERSONAL GOD? HAS HE SPOKEN TO YOU? FINDANSWERS- Free correspond. ence course on the Torah, the books of Moses. New Testament in English and Yiddish also available with- out charge. P.0. Sox 049 Rochester; N.Y. 14603 .. . edJ r' ce rtainether countries anal 'Never, under any pretext, an additional chld, especially certain other countries. may abortion be resorted to' if there are good reasons to fear T H E GOVERNMENT said either by a family or by a po- that the child will be abnormal the system works the same way litical authority, as a legitimate or retarded . . . We proclaim when a British publisher brought means of regulating birth," said only that none of these reasons out a book to be published in the Vatican document. can ever objectively confer the the United States. A U.S. pub- It was issued by the Congre- right to dispose of another per- lisher gets exclusive rights to gation for the Propagation of ns life, even whenthat life handle the book in this country the Faith, which stressed that I and certain other countries by Pope Paul VI had signed and said. agreeing to stay out of the approved it. "IN REALITY, respect for British market, the suit said. THE DOCUMENT upheld human life is called for from the time that generation be- As a result, the suit, "coin- points that the Pope reaffirmed gins," the document said. petition in the sale of English two weeks ago in his address to "From the time that an ovum language copyrighted books delegates ofthe U.N. World s tilzed a ite is begun among United States and Unit- Food Conference in Rome. iwheichiszeaithe tatsfe ed Kingdom publishing houses But the 5,000-word statement father nor of the mother; it is has been suppressed. was the strongest-worded Vati- rather the life of a new human being with its own growth." The document acknowledged TRY OUR that "modern technology makes early abortion more and more SCH EESE easy, but moral evaluation is in no way modified because of this." Pointing out women's respon- sibilities on the question, the with Your Choice of document said: WYr le "THE MOVEMENT for the DOMESTIC or emancipation of women, in so far as it seeks essentially to 1301 South University IMPORTED WIN ES free them from all unjust discri- mination, is on perfectly sound ground . . . But one can not "and must always be careful not E- to violate justice." "If one tries to say that men and women are free to seek sex-! ual pleasure to the point of satiety, without taking into ac- count any law or the essential orientation of sexual life to its fruits of fertility, then this idea has nothing Christian in it," the document said. ca-nyms from INDIA- hand-ca rved wood and brass 204 S. STATE (downstairs) mon.-sat. 10-6 fri. 10-9 THE CENTER FOR RUSSIAN & EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES PRESENTS its 2nd annual SOVIET FILM FESTIVAL 4:00 p.m. to 12:00 midnight ROOM 200 LANE HALL TUESDAY, NOV. 26, 1974 FREE ADMISSION 4:00-Birth of the Soviet Cinema 9:00--Night and Fog 5:10-The Art of the Baltic 9:40-Rise & Fall of Nazi Republics Germany 5:50--Russia-The Unfinished 10:00-Warsaw Ghetto Revoluion 11:00-Voices from the 7:00-And Quiet Flows the Don Russian Underground THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY IS INVITED TO A TTEND -nFe E R EH R IO ikt! 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN "'4:'>:}": ?:i:"::isg E i::irr4."i^:-:..rr"4rZarr":: i":" ::::r°:",'i: :?"?{{:::^i:"si:%::.; :;.;:: Day Calendar Tuesday, November 26 WUOM: Marvin Becker, "A His- torian's View of Another Pericles," 9:40 am; Ross Lee Finney-A Musi- cal Autobiography, 10:35 am. Hospital Commission for Women: C3086 Outpatient Bldg., noon. Communication, Computer Sci- ence: Colloquium, Manfred Kochen, "Representations and Algorithms for Cognitive Learning," 3032 Frieze, 4 pm. Humanities: C. L. Barber, U. of Cal., Santa Cruz, ' "Shokespeare's 'Pericles"' Rackham Amph., 4 pm. CREES: Soviet Film Festival, 200 gen Maser," 2038 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Ext. Service, English Dept.: Under- grad poetry reading, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 pm. Modern Dance Class: Trotter House, 7 pm. American Assoc. Critical Care Nurses: Richard Weeks, "Reye's Syndrome," 6330 Main Hosp., 7 pm. Health Care Collective/M.C.H.R. sMeeting: 2207 Union, 7:30 pm. Music School: Rug Concert, Per- cussion Ensemble, Charles Owen, conductor, Cady Music Rm.; DMA Piano Series, Andrej Dutkiewicz, piano, Recital Hall; both events, 8 pm. Sponsored by CARFF R ATTENTION: GRADUATE & PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL APPLICANTS 1 Lane Hall, 4 pm-midnight. Residential College Dancers: "Mo- Low Energy Seminar: D. Larson, bility from There to Here," R. C. Harvard, "Physics with the Hydro- Aud., E. Quad, 8 pm. Musical Hit THE APPLE TREE ONE DETROIT NIGHT ONLY! NYC Theatre Co. in Musicomedy by Bock and Harnick, C rotrof Fidlrn Rnn fnd Fio lln Planning t Placement If you have application deadlines of: DECEMBER 15 JANUARY 15 Ha ve your recommendation request to CP&P by: MONDAY, DEC. 2 FRIDAY, DEC. 6 764-7460 December 4-Olympia We will be closing on Dec. 20 for the Holiday Season. Have a Happy Holiday NOW OPEN \.reators or a er on OOT ana r' % . S-- THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS Founders Society Concert Series: Edith J. Freeman, Chairman AUDITORIUM-MON., DEC. 2-8:30 P.M. GET ANY Art Institute Ticket Office (832-2730), All Hudsons 4x $7, $6, EXTRA 3rd Annua ZA T Y PIZZA FOR THE ' WINTER ART FAIR 1LARGE: Sunday, December15 PZZA Open Sales 12 :30-6:30 p.m Auction'M. Bonzo's Dog House 216 S. FOURTH AVE. Records & Paraphernalia at the lowest prices in town- The best current LP product and tasty oldies Grand opening and drawing for tickets Deecmber 2 I NAAAF MA AA~ U v