This Sunday, Jan. 16 participate in 'A Conversation With Raphael Ezekiel" (Associate Professor of Psychology) FOLLOWING LOX AND BAGELS BRUNCH 11 A.M. at HILLEL-1429 Hill I I 1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 B -AL Lddhi- t i CYi taiit page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, January 14, 1972 w s by The Associated Press UAC-DAYSTAR CDDERN A C and his LOST PLANET AIRMEN Sunday, Jan. 23-Hill Aud. $1.00-$1.50-$2.00-$2.50 With: Buddies in the Saddle and The Boogie Brothers (Steven & John) TICKETS: Michigan Union 12-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Salvation Record Stores and Ned's Bookstore in Ypsilanti Ticket Counter: 763-4553 PLEASE-No Smoking in Concert Auditorium BEFORE: AFTER: GOV. GEORGE WALLACE of Alabama announced yester- day that he is a candidate for the Democratic presidential nom- ination in order to force other Democrats to "straighten up and fly right" and to scare President Nixon into stopping school busing. Wallace made the formal announcement at the state capital in Tallahassee, Fla., and in doing so became the 12th candidate to enter that state's Democratic primary. In his speech, Wallace stated that he was a serious contender for the nomination, but he did not rule out the possibility if defeated. of running again as a third party candidate.' Wallace was the presidential standard-bearer of the American Independent Party in the 1968 election and garnered some 13.5 per Gent of the total vote. The issue of busing which figured so prom- inently in that campaign was also the major theme of Wallace's ad- dress yesterday. THREE BLACK PANTHERS were sentenced to prison terms of one to five years yesterday on weapons conspiracy convictions stemming from a shootout with police at the L.A. Panther head- quarters two years ago. Six other members of the Panther party, also convicted of con- spiracy to possess illegal weapons, were placed on three years pro- bation. Two Panthers, Jackie Johnson and Isiah Houston, had been acquitted on Dec. 23. In the stormy seven month trial, the prosecution claimed the. Panthers plotted to kill policemen, stockpiling weapons for that purpose. The defense maintained that the police had harassed Panthers, trying to provoke a bloody confrontation. Six policemen and three Panthers were wounded in the gun battle at Panther headquarters Dec. 8, 1969. SHEIK MUJIBUR RAHMAN, now prime minister of Bangla- desh, yesterday assumed Cabinet responsibility for the new na- tion's defense and internal affairs, as well as the posts of min- ister of information and Cabinet affairs. Aside from naming himself to four additional Cabinet posts- including minister of defense and home affairs --Mujib only named one minister who is not among the men who served in the Cabinet pf the Bangladesh government in exile. He is Dr. Kamarl Hussain, 35, who was jailed with Mujib in West Pakistan during the East Pakistani uprising since last March. Meanwhile, Pres. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto of Pakistan insisted at a news conference that links still are possible between West Pakistan and Bangladesh, despite Mujib's recent statement to the contrary. VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO AGNEW and Atty. Gen. John Mitchell announced yesterday a $160 million program to fight crime in eight cities over the next three years. "There will be an across-the-board attack on street crimes and ourglaries, the kinds of crimes that are the most prevalent and the mnost feared," Agnew told a news conference also attended by mayors: and governors of the cities and states affected. The money will be distributed in a non-categorized fashion, some- what similar to'President Nixon's proposal for revenue-sharing, to Newark, Baltimore, Atlanta, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, St. Louis, and Portland, Ore. Wallace to seek presidency Alabama governor George Wallace gestures with his hand as he announces in Tallahassee, Fla. that he is a candidate for the Democratic presidential March 14 Florida primary. (See News Briefs at left). BLOO)LESS REVOLT: Military coup ousts Ghana government next year, both of which ex- ceed the board's own 5.5 per cent wage guideline. The board rejected the 12 per cent raise Jan. 6, saying it was inconsistent with the board's standards. Labor members were outvoted then by a solid front of public and business members, first 9-5, then 9-0, with labor abstain- ing. Yesterday's plan was adopted 8-2, with the five labor members abstaining and two business mem- bers in the minority. Chairman George Boldt, a public member; who twice abstained last week, cast his vote this time to make the eight-man majority. The board said it would make an exception to the 5.5 rule for the aerospace workers because of 1968 agreements by unions and management to provide a cost of living catch-up this year. . It was not immediately clear whether the leadership of the two unions would renegotiate their re-. jected contracts to conform with the Pay Board's plan, or~ whether. they would -make good on their promise to sue the Pay Board for the full 12 per cent raise, or both. A spokesman for the machinists, however, said union president Floyd Smith intends to press the promised lawsuit, which has not yet been filed. Meanwhile, in other board ac- tion, procedures under which all raises lost during the 90-day wage freeze will be :paid, unless specif- ically stopped by the board itself, were approved, a source said. The vote was 14-0, with chair- man George Boldt abstaining. Adoption of the regulations re- moves a major obstacle holding up back pay estimated as high as $1.5 billion. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. 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, .$11 by. mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. 8% aerospace industry wage hike approved by Pay Board WAS1INGTON LIP - The Pay Board yesterday by a scant margin approved an eight per cent wage increase for aero- space workers, after rejecting last week a bid for a full 12 per cent pay raise. The board formula, if the unions accept it, means that the 100,000 aerospace workers will receive roughly $340 less .this year than they would have under the rejected 12 per " cent raise. The new plan also would mean approval by the board of raises of eight per cent this year and seven per cent, plus a cost of living adjustment, of CAN STEREOPHONIC SOUND MAKE YOU A DIFFERENT PERSON? Why not find out? Come see 'SPACE ODYSSEY' on the wide screen in stereophonic sound. * NOW SHOWING-STATE Theatre Dial 662-6264 Corner State and Liberty Shows at1:15 3.45 6:15 8:45 ACCRA, Ghana (P) - Junior army officers o v e r t u r n e d Ghana's two year old civilian government yesterday while the prime minister was abroad for medical care. The rebel officers accused Prime Minister Kofi Busia, 58, of mismanaging the West Afri- can nation's long-troubled econ- omy. Busia, in London, called the coup "selfish and senseless" and predicted the people of Ghana would rise against it. "I know the vast majority of Ghanaians appreciate what we are doing and that my govern- ment has their full support and loyalty . . ." Busia said. "I have no doubt that the regions will not back this deliberate act of a small section of the army bas- ed in Accra." In Accra, the capital, bus- loads of cheering workers rode through the street to shout support for the revolt, led by Lt. Col. I.K. Acheampong, 40. There was no sign of bloodshed. The Accra airport closed down and reopened within a few hours of the coup announce- ment. Normal communications channels were severed but the city seemed normal, with down- town streets crowded as usual. There was no way to deter- mine, however, whether the coup was greeted similarly in other parts of the country or whether all other army units were behind Acheampong. He commands the largest army unit in the Accra area. The rebel officers announced they had suspended the consti- tution and banned political par- ties. They said this nation of nine million will be ruled by what they called a national redemption council of army of- ficers, tribal chiefs, union lead- ers, members of the Christian and Moslem council and the the Ghana Assembly of Women. Troops eut in Vietnam by 70,000 WASHINGTON (JP) - President Nixon announced yesterday that 70,000 more American troops will be brought home from Vietnam before May, reducing the . S. military force there to the smal- lest total in nearly seven years. The new withdrawal order, step- ping up the pace lightly, will, bring the American commitment in Vietnam down to 69,000 men on May 1-a drop of 474,000 from the peak shortly after Nixon took office in early 1969. Following Nixon's brief an- nouncement, Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird fired what sounded like the opening volley of the President's re-election campaign with a sharp shot at Democratic White House hopefuls. "Strangely enough, some of those individuals that are going around the country today criticiz- ing the program to withdraw Americans from Vietnam were si- lent in 1968 and before when we were on the escalator going up, up, and up," Laird said. "Now when we are going down, down, down, it seems they have changed this position and are critical of the President and the program . . . to withdraw Americans from Southeast Asia and South Vietnam." Laird named no one specifically, but it was obvious he was refer- ring to Sen. Edmund Muskie (D- Me.), currently rated the Demo- cratic front-runner, and other Democratic contenders who have urged that Nixon set a specific withdrawal date and pull out all Americans. UAC-DAYSTAR Concert Series Needs Your Help-- Rock Music Concerts are in Danger of Becoming Extinct At U of M PLEASE DON'T SMOKE INSIDE CONCERT AUDITORIUM SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. 9 '7 Annual Sale of Hanes Hosiery January 15th to January 22nd Substantial savings on your favorite leg fashions / J/ Three-pair box regularly STOCKINGS Sheer with reinforced heel and toe. ....... Stretch Cantrece II or Agilon stocking. . . . 4.50 . . . . . . SALE 3.75 4.50 9.75 "'Ii TONIGHT ONLY ANDY WARHOL'S 1, A MAN Dir. ANDY WARHOL, 1967 with Tom Baker, Cynthia, May, Ivy Nicholson, Ing- rid Superstar, Stephanie Froves, Valerie Solanas, and Bettina Coffin Another Warhol look at the studly besieged Americon m a I e. Plus a . . . . 5.25 Alive" support stocking 11.85 . . . . . ".". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PANTY STOCKINGS Stretch Cantrece 11 with nude heel.............. . . $9 Sheer-to-waist with sandal foot.................. $9 Sheer heel, demi-toe panty stocking............. . $9 A ;~e iin-. -n y tn in - - - - -- - -. -17 RS 7.50 7.50 7.50 14R.8