Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 27-S C Friday, June9,1978 I m c i A L Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Chinese back Zaire, Teng says TOKYO (AP) - Deputy Chinese leader Teng Hsiao-ping yesterday ac- cused the Soviet Union of throwing Africa into "unprecedented turmoil" and declared it will support Zaire and other developing nations in "just struggles," according to a Hsinhua dispatch monitored here. The Chinese news agency said Teng who is deputy premier and vice chair- man of the Communist Party, made the assertion at a Peking banquet for Maj. Gen. Juvenal Habyalimana, president of Rwanda, which is a neighbor of Zaire. Janan's Kvodo news service reported diplomats from the Soviet Union, Cuba and six other Soviet-bloc nations walked out of the banquet after Teng's comments. "OVER THE past year and more, the rivalry between the superpowers in Africa has been getting ever fiercer so that Africa has become ahot spot in the two superpowers' strategic plans for dominating the world," Hsinhua quoted Teng as saying. Teng's promise of support for Zaire echoed comments made Wednesday in the Zairian capital of Kinshasa by Foreign Minister Huang Hua, who was visiting Zaire to assess damage done in the mineral-rich area of Kolwezi, overrun last month by Lunda secessionist tribesmen. Huang alleged the rebels, who were driven from Kolwezi by a French- Belgian force, were Soviet- and Cuban- backed. "UNDER THE leadership fo President Mobutu, the Zairian people and army have waged a just struggle against the invasion by the Soviet- Cuban-hired mercenaries in the Shaba region, and for the defense of national independence, state unity and territorial integrity," Hsinhua quoted Huang as saying. Huang called his four-day visit to Zaire "successful." he flew to Amster- dm, the'Netherlands, before returning to Peking. WITHOUT MENTIONING the Soviet Union by name, Teng said, "The late coming superpower, in particular, has continually dispatched additional mer- cenaries to Africa to kindle flames of war in various places, throwing Africa into unprecedented turmoil and causing great anxiety among African coun- tries," the report said. "Before the war flames it fanned up in the Horn of Africa where the Soviets are backing Ethiopia had died down, it recently engineered a second intrusion into Zaire by mercenaries," Teng was quoted as saying. "The Chinese government and people firmly support the African people in their just cause of unity against hegemonism, imperialism and colonialism, firmly support Zaire, the Third World and all sovereign coun- tries." Carter to 'beef up' imports WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter announced yesterday he will let enough foreign beef into the country this year to keep hamburger and processed beef prices an estimated five cents a pound below what they other- wise might be. He said the action will save con- sumers $500 million this year but won't hurt American cattlemen, whose lob- bying organizations denounced the move. AGRICULTURE Secretary Bob Bergland said the foreign beef would be mostly lean, grass-fed meat which is generally blended with cuttings from fat American cattle and used to make hamburger and sausage. The administration is calling the move anti-inflationary even though it is ex- pected to add only minimally to the total beef supply. Some government economists predict with Carter that the import decision will reduce average beef costs by nearly a nickel a pound later this year, but others are saying the effect will be just a cent or two decrease. Farmers, the meat industry and congressional critics are broadly pan- ning the plan, labeling it as inept, cosmetic and devastating to ranchers. CARTER'S PLAN, which was scheduled to be released yesterday, would allow 200 million more pounds of beef into the country through a renegotiation of existing trade pacts with 13 foreign meat exporters. See PRESIDENT. Page 1 Love means never paying attention to snooping photographers The camera catches this pair in a brief snap of the shutter, then the photographer sneaks away- Keys to' By R. J. SMITH Thieves broke into a storage locker in an office in Engineering Services, next to the Administrative Services Building on Hoover and Green Streets, two weeks ago and stole between 100 and 112 University keys. The keys are masters and submasters which would give the robbers access to many University buildings. The Department of Safety, which runs University security, acted to sup- press news of the crime immediately following the incident, in order to protect their investigation from publicity. Normally, a statement is available to the public from both the Department of Safety and the Ann Ar- bor police after a crime has been repor- ted to authorities. THE DEPARTMENT now says their investigation has "petered out," and that the theft of the keys isan "unusual 'U' buildings stolen mystery." ACCORDING to Department of Safety Director Fred Davids, the stolen keys will open both libraries, the Modern Languages Building, Angell Hall, and the Literature, Science and Arts Building. The robbers do not have keys for any University housing, Medical Center facilities, athletic area buildings, Cen- tral or North Campus recreation facilities or the University's cashier's offices. Also, no keys were reported missing for the Michigan Union, the Administration Building, the president's residence or several other University buildings. The robbery occurred sometime bet- ween late Friday afternoon, May 26, and Monday morning, May 29, when the theft was discovered. University security guards turned in all their keys Friday afternoon to the Engineering Services offices. The list of keys stolen does not in- clude any interior building keys, Davids said. Since the key theft, there have been no reports of major rob- beries from those buildings affected. The Department of Safety and the Ann Arbor police withheld any public release of the robbery's occurrence. "I didn't seek to give out too much publicity at the outset," said Davids. "I was hoping that we wouldn't put too much force on the robber, to make him throw the keys away rather than us finding them." THE DAILY learned of the robbery from two sources, one of which was an anonymous phone call. Inside the Engineering Services of- fices, the keys were stored inside a locker with what Davids described as a "nickel and dime lock which you could See 100, Page 11