Thursday, September 14, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three, Thursday, September 14, 1972 THE MICHiGAN DAILY Page Three INTERESTED IN CHANGE? T he Project Community 2210 SAB-763-3548 -PROJECTS '72-'73- " Innovative Tutorial Experience " Child Care Program " Matrix (Resource Center) " Halfway House-Ypsilanti State Hospital Tutoring " Project Community Course " Solstis Free School " Washtenaw Community College Tutoring. " Willow Run Counseling Project " Washtenaw County Jail " Maxey Boys Training School * Income Tax Assistance U.S.-USSR trade pact likely as result of Kissinger's talks MOSCOW (A) - A leading Soviet news correspondent, reporting on Henry Kissinger's Kremlin talks, said yesterday the United States and the Soviet Union are on the verge of signing a giant new trade pact. It may include the location of an American trade center in Moscow, complete with hotels. The Kremlin talks have been held since Monday in secrecy with officials from neither side disclos- ing what was going on. Victor Louis, a Soviet citizen who writes for the London Evening Standard from Moscow, said in a dispatch to the newspaper yester- day that one of the outcomes of the talks would be a trade agree- ment, that would be worth $4.90 billion a year by 1977. Louis wrote that Kissinger's de- cision to extend his stay in Mos- cow by one day "seemed to un- derline" that the trade negotia- tions "had gone beyond the stage of consultation." "The pact would lead to trade and Export-Import bank credits on London he had reached an agree- ment with the Soviets that would involve an estimated $5 billion. * From generally well-informed Soviet sources came the report that Kissinger and Kremlin lead- ers were close to settling Russia's World War II lend-leage debt, a major obstacle to expanding Sov- iet-American trade. Bilateral trade was believed to have been on the agenda for Kis- singer's talks with Communist par- ty chief Leonid Brezhnev, Premier Alexei Kosygin and Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko. Other topics were said to include the Vietnam war, European secur- ity and the limitation of strategic arms. West European diplomats said mutual force reductions in Europe and the Soviet-promoted European security conference were two of the principal subjects on Gromyko's agenda with Kissinger. Apparently other subjects such as U.S.-Soviet trade and Vietnam were discussed during Kissinger's talks with Brezhnev and Kosygin. Kissinger's trip to Paris on Fri- day has lent support to growing speculation that he would meet with Le Duc Tho, North Vienam's top adviser to the Vietnam peace talks. I--------_-I HELD I # O4 OVER! Sale of U.S. wheat to. mainland China reported WASHINGTON 01) - Govern- trade agreement with China. I don't ment sources said yesterday t h e know how close it will be. The United States has sold some wheat President opened the door a little DIAL 8-6416 . an inspired blend of fact and fantasy. It leaps backwards and forwards in space and time with utter abandon . . . from the grimness of a German P.O.W. camp in winter to the lush- ness of n geod-sic dream house--complete with pneumatic dream girl. 2 THIS TRIP, ONE MUST FASTEN ...a SEAT BELT AND HOLD ON TIGHT!" -Arthur Knight, Saturday Review WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL JURY PRIZE AWARD Only American Film to be so Honored KURT VONNEGUT JR'S SLAUGHTERHOUSE -IVE g o the . most daring, orga pictures ever made. R 1W R ta~io LYN LARSEN at the BARTON PIPE ORGAN accompanying the 1926 Silent Film Classic "The Son of the Shiek starring RUDOLPH VALENTINO plus SING-ALONG and POP-CONCERT W EDNESDAY, SEPT. 20 at 8 p.m. MICHIGAN THEATER E. Liberty at State ALL SEATS $3.00 Advance tickets on sale at the Theater a scale that only the superpowers to China, the first American grain! could afford," he added. "T h e sale to the Communist country in' Americans are already planning a more than 20 years. trade center in Moscow complete The sources, asking not to be, with American firms and hotels identified, said at least one U.S. - and the American way of doing export company is involved. The' business." Agriculture Department declined' He added Russia would probably comment. be granted "most-favored nation According to the sources, how-f status similar to that already en- ever, the department has received joyed by Poland and Yugoslavia." applications for export subsidies on{ U.S. officials in Moscow said they wheat to be shipped to China.' had no information on the report. A spokesman for the Export Mar- Louis' report coincided with one keting Services in the department from the news agency Tass that said he could not confirm or deny the American firm, Occidental Pe- the reports. However, he said troleum, opened a business office "something" might be announced in Moscow Wednesday. later today or early tomorrow. Occidental's president, Armand Secretary of Agriculture E a r 1 Hammer, has been in Moscow con- Butz said if a deal was pending; ducting his own secret negotiations or already concluded, he was un- with the Russians for the p a s t aware of it. week. He said, however, "Down theI In July, Hammer announced in road sometime is a substantial1 Church fails to appear at coference on aging at co bit with his China trip." Butz also said a deal conceivably could have been made by a pri- vate company and the government would not necessarily have a n y knowledge of it. Rumors have circulated in the grain trade that China has order- ed at least 20 million bushels of U.S. wheat. Nixon administration officials have been predicting for some time that China would soon open up as a new U.S. farm ex- port market. The unofficial report of w h e a t sales to China came on the eve of a congressional hearing t o d a y on the question of earlier, much larger wheat sales to the Soviet Union. Those sales, amounting to 400j million bushels, helped push wheat prices up sharply this summer. The Soviet deal also has prompt- ed charges by Sen. George Mc- Govern and others that the Agri- culture Department held up in- formation on the Soviet transac- tions and caused some farmers in the early harvest areas to miss out on the rising markets by having to sell their grain at lower prices. A military-political complex? Gen. Creighton Abrams, up for nomination as the Army Chief of Staff, talks with Sen. John Stennis (D.-Miss.), chairman of the Armed Service Committee. Abrams testified before the committee about his version of the North Vietnamese air raids ordered by Gen. John Lavelle. 'ALEST URE': POWs to be, escorted hom---e "An administration committed to bombs in Indochina and un- employment at home has decided to say no to spending more on programs for the aged," charged William Oriole yesterday at the final assembly of the Conference on Aging. Oriole, a member of Sen. Frank Church's (D-Idaho) staff, read Church's speech as Church was unable to come to the conference due to yesterday's lengthy Sen- ate session. Oriole states that the results of the White House Conference on Aging are commendable, but that the Nixon administration has adopted a "this too, shall pass attitude. They have never direct- ly stated their goals. Their usual policy on the aged is no policy." Church's speech called for an international conference on aging in the near future, possibly co- ordinated through the United Na- tions. The speech also called for co- operation between the U.S. and the USSR on diseases of the aged such as heart attacks and lung cancer. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 locai mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-locai maii (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: a $5.50 by carrier (canpus area) ; $6.50 local maili (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other' states and foreign). from N. NEW YORK (A') - Relatives of three American war prisoners to be freed by North Vietnam, ac- companied by three peace activ- ists, left for Hanoi last night to escort the liberated pilots back home. The wife and the mother of two of the three imprisoned air- men were in the entourage led by antiwar advocates Cora Weiss and David Dellinger. They were scheduled to arrive in Hanoi on Saturday. The father of the third pilot said he was un- able to make the 'flight. Yale University Chaplain Wil- liam Sloane Coffin, veteran peace movement spokesman, also was in the delegation, which was tra- veling under the sponsorship of the Committee of Liaison with Families of Servicemen Detained in North Vietnam. Weiss and Del- linger are heads of the commit- tee, Dellinger's presence on the jour- ney was in doubt until yesterday morning, when a federal appeals court in Chicago granted the long time pacifist permission to travel outside the United States. Court approval was needed be- cause Dellinger was free on bail pending appeal of his Chicago Vietnam by relatives Seven conspiracy conviction that followed the disorders at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Dellinger and Weiss said last week that Hanoi had invited rela- tives of the POWs to be released to accompany the committee members to the North Vietnam- ese capital. One prisoner was captured when his plane was shot down over North Vietnam last Decem- ber. Another has been imprisoned for four years and the third for three months. The group was to fly to Hanoi via Copenhagen, Bangkok a n d Vientiane and return with t h I prisohers on Sept. 25. In New Haven, Conn., before the flight, Chaplain Coffin told newsmen he saw nothing wrong with making statements o v e r Hanoi radio while in North Viet- nam. He did not say whether he intended to make any statements. The clergymen termed the im- pending release of the prisoners "a gesture" and said: "A ges- tvre calls for some reciprocation. An appropriate reciprocal ges- ture might be a halt in t h e bombing." Should he speak on'Hanoi rad- io, he said, it would be "not out of love for Hanoi, but out of love for my own country." The chaplain said he wished "to make it perfectly clear that I have never supported Hanoi," His own view, he said, was that the United States "should n o t support either North Vietnam or South Vietnam." MMMMMMMEMEMMMMMMEN9 20 yrs. and older 761-8845 INTERNATIONAL A Service of Westinghouse Mass Meeting U-M RIDING CLUB Monday, Sept. 18 7 P.M. Union Faculty Club 761-9555 0 THE CAGE IS COMING anyone interested in ': Prison contact: M i°PHONE 992-6264 7T Reform 4ARK-763-6641 E U Il OPEN 12:45- -SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. Order Your Subscription today 764-0558 r i snankar Q nnraOCx~x " *NMASC3 Daily Classifieds PSON IBring Results Andy Warhol's Lonesome Cowboys with Viva!, Tom Hompertz, Joe Dollesandro, Eric Ericson, Taylor Mead, Louis Waldron, Francis Francine, & Julian Burroughs "ANDY WARHOL'S 'LONESOME COWBOYS' MAY BE A BIT TOO MUCH FOR MANY PEOPLE, BUT THAT'S THEIR PROBLEM." ' -vyssema, .r.~.A11..)NILE "JUST ABOUT AS MUCH AS '1 AM CURIOUS'. -Vincen ran, N. F. CHRKNICt --Vincent Canby, NEW YORK TIMES Friday Sept 15 Hill Aud. I "Now that Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi have passed on, Viva! stands unrivaled as the screen's fore- most purveyor of horror. By the simple expedient of removing her clothing, she can produce a sense of primordial terror several nightmares removed from any mad doctor's laboratory. -TIME Magazine TONIGHT!-September 14th-ONLY!-in Color-X-7 & 9:30 p.m. COMING TUESDAY-Dustin Hoffman in Penn's LITTLE BIG MAN NEXT THURSDAY-Francois Truffaut's THE 400 BLOWS September 27th-SOME'OF MY BEST FRIENDS ARE . . . (First Run!) I I