THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXI1I, No. 31-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, June 21, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Brezhniev, Ixen R new arlilS CAMP DAVID, Md. UP--President Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev have reached agreement on a new pact designed to spur a permanent ban on offensive nuclear weapons, authoritative sources dis- closed late yesterday. The signing is tentatively set for today. At the same time, Nixon and the interest of both our governments and Brezhnev may announce an accord our peoples. I am satisfied." for joint cooperation in peaceful uses of atomic energy. EARLIER, before the day's talks began, AP Photo President Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev at Camp David yesterday. b clears SAB offices for use by adiiation By REBECCA WARNER Many University students, especially those who realize the Student Activities Building (SAB) was built on a student fee assessment, labor under the impression that the SAB belongs to the student body forever. Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, by the end of the summer, ac- cording to plan, all but a few corners of the SAB will have been remodelled and taken over by administrative offices. The large majority of the 20 to 30 stu- dent organizations now h o 1 d i n g office space in the SAB will be relocated in the Union. Advocates of the switch predict that eventually the old SAB will be completely empty of student groups, and claim that relocation in the Union will foster a spirit of "togetherness." In vie w of the c o m i n g relocation, Tenants Union (TU) member David Raaf- laub has called the student fee funding of the SAB "misrepresentation or even fraud" by the University. Raaflaub says the University "touted the building as for students and student activities and got the money on that pre- text." But since the completion of a finance plan for the SAB, which used a 15 year student fee assessment to pay back a' $1.7 million construction loan, University offi- cials have been negotiating the conver- sion of the building to administrative use. "Grave errors have been made by stu- dents based on the idea that because the word 'student' precedes the word 'fee,' that implies student control," remarks Housing Director John Feldkamp. The Housing administration offices will take over the first floor SAB space now filled by student organizations. The TU and several other organizations housed on the first floor of the SAB say they consulted two local law firms regard- ing possible legal resistance to the relo- cation. Raaflaub described the response as "pessimistic" although he reserved an "outside possibility" of legal action. Other organizations say the high cost of a suit against the University was pro- hibitive. See STUDENT, Page 10 THE FINISHING touches on the agree- ment, which contains guidelines for the now-recessed SALT II talks in Geneva, were reached by Nixon and Brezhnev in summit conferences held at the Presiden- tial mountain retreat here. THE AGREEMENT could rival in im- portance the accord reached in Moscow last spring when Nixon and Brezhnev held their first summit. Those talks pro- duced permanent limits on some nuclear defensive weapons and a temporary limit- ed ban on some offensive weapons. It was understood the new guidelines reached here were mostly general in na- ture. But they are intended to accelerate the suspended technical talks covering such complex systems as multi-targeted missile warheads. The document would not be a treaty, but is considered essential to get the stalled Geneva talks moving again. A COMPANION PACT would pool U.S. and Soviet research in the field of peace- ful uses of nuclear energy, including fast- breeder reactors and controlled explosions. Nixon and Brezhnev met late last night and planned to reconvene today. Spokesmen said Nixon and Brezhnev had expanded their discussions to include the forthcoming Helsinki conference on European security and prospects for a -mutual reduction in the military forces maintained in Europe by the United States and the Soviet Union. THE TWO LEADERS met under tight security. Helmeted Marines in combat green lined theaelectrified barbed wire double fences that line the 143-acre presi- dential retreat. In a brief break, Brezhnev performed again for photographers, this time wearing a blue windbreaker with a Camp David seal and his name on it. "It's all the President's doing," he said. "He gave it to me." Growing serious, the Soviet leader said of the summit generally, "The results wilt be good without question. The talks are in Brezhnev met in private with Nixon for about 15 minutes and told newsmen who asked about the talks, "They have started well." See NIXON, Page 10 rThe tactics of Lenin By The Associated Press Ideologically speaking, Leonid Brezhnev is beyond reproach in his venture into the wilds of capitalism. He is, carrying out to the letter the strategy of V. L Lenin. While that doesn't seem to raise many eyebrows on this side of the water, it does pose a question of just how much things have changed in the Soviet atti- tude toward the United States. IN 1920 when newly established Soviet Russia - it was not yet the Soviet Union - was in desperate need of help out of its enormous economic troubles, the founder of Bolshevism,' Vladimir Lenin, had this to say: "Let the American capitalists not dis- turb us. We shall not disturb them. We are ready even to pay them with gold for machinery, tools and so forth, which are of use to transport and production; and not only with gold, but also with raw ma- terials." Now, 53 years later, Lenin's successor casts an eye at U.S. capitalism as a source for the wherewithal to cure Soviet economic ills. In effect, he is saying: "Okay, capitalists, let's trade. We want machines and tools and so forth, and we can pay for them with raw materials; See BREZHNEV, Page 10