NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 SKI TAHOE Adommomme ; ritilU 40 4:3atly page three March 5-11 Winter Break 199 PLUS $199 TAXES DOUBLE OCCUPANCY SHOWS-SKI DISCOUNTS K I NGS CASTLE HOTEL 2 MEALS DAILY Phone 911-8946 anytime Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, February 8, 1972 news briefs by The Associated Press U... ......_.......__..._........ DIAL 665-6290 "NEVER GIVE A INCH" was the motto of the Stampers of Oregon. and live it they did! PaulsI EUHI8NiE hRFODDa LEE REMIK mIcilaEl.saRltin AUnersallNewman-oreman Picture G TECHNICOLOR'- PANAVISION, P PRESIDENTIAL ASSISTANT H. R. HALDEMAN accused Senate critics of President Nixon's eight-point peace plan of yconsciously aiding and abetting the enemy of the United States" yesterday. His remarks were made on the NBC "Today" program. Presi- dential press secretary Ronald Ziegler said Haldeman's remarks ex-' pressed his own personal opinion and he was not speaking for the' President. BANGLADESH PRIME MINISTER Sheik Mujibur Rahman and India Prime Minister Indira Gandhi agreed yesterday to withdraw all Indian troops from Bangladesh by the end of March. The two leaders were quoted by reliable sources to have said they felt the troops had fulfilled their purpose and that their continued presence would "serve as fuel for Pakistani propaganda." In Dacca, a Bangladesh spokesman said the government has jailedj nearly 1,500 Bihari Moslems for collaboration with the Pakistan army. CLIFFORD IRVING, the purported biographer of Howard Hughes, spent 90 minutes today before a New York grand jury investigating charges of fraud. Meanwhile, the Internal Revenue Service filed tax liens totaling more than $490,000 against Irving and his wife, who allegedly de- posited $650,000 intended for Hughes in a Swiss bank. Although a formal extradition request for Mrs. Irving has not yet been received from Swiss officials, Interpol (International Police)> has asked for her arrest. * * * A SPACE AGENCY REPORT from Houston suggests that American and Soviet spacemen may link and orbit their space- craft while visiting with each other for two days., The report said a mid-1975 launch date was feasible. After the docking exercise, the American spacecraft would separate, descend to a lower circular orbit and remain aloft 11 more days. * * THE HOUSE APPROVED yesterday a bill that provides for a $250 million two-year pilot program offering free or low-cost meals and services to needy persons sixty years of age and older. The bill now goes to the Senate. The program, to be administered by the states, gives preference to low-income people and insures that allocated grants allow minority individuals to run the projects and receive benefits from them. Benefits include at least one hot meal five times per week, health and welfare counseling and recreational opportunities. President OKs bil regulating election funds WASHINGTON UP) - President Nixon signed a bill yes- terday which limits the amount of money a presidential can- didate can spend on his election. The legislation also requires reporting of campaign con- tributions over-$100. The law sets no over-all campaign spending limit, but presidential candidates can spend no more than $50,000 or 10 cents for every potential voter, whichever is larger. Based on this formula, the maximum expenditure would be $8.4 million. Senate candidates are limited to spending $35,000 on their ownuse candidates can only spend $25,000. 1i Co unterparts Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird hosts a luncheon at the Pen- tagon for his Israeli counterpart, Defense Minister Moshe Dayan. Dayan is in the United States for talks with American officials and to aid in the selling of Israeli bonds. INJUNCTION POSSIBLE: Bil speeds dock strike negotiations I WHY ARE SANDER LEVIN SEN. JOHN TUNNEY LEONARD WOODCOCK SEN. HAROLD HUGHES GOV. JOHN GILLIGAN MARIANNE MOORE, the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who died Saturday at age 84, was buried today in Brooklyn. Miss Moore, probably America's most-honored woman poet, also won the Bollingen Prize in 1951 and the National Book Award in 1952. SAN FRANCISCO () - Ne- gotiators in the West Coast dock strike worked yesterday to achieve agreement before Con- gress votes on a new plan for a 60-day injunction to partially end the record 122-day walkout. Th 'y resumed talks less than an hour after a House Labor Subcommittee in Washington approved the injunction plan drafted by Chairman F r a n k Thompson, (D-N.J.). Earlier the committee rejected the Presi- dent"s plan calling for strikers immediate return to their jobs. Thompson said Harry Bridges, president of the International Longshoremen's a n d Ware- housemen's Union, told him the union would continue the San Francisco negotiations through Wednesday. Bridges was quoted as saying the ILWU then would propose submitting 11 unresolved issues to a private mediator for bind- ing arbitration. Thompson's bill would author- ize the government to seek a 60- day injunction ordering the union and shippers to handle military and agricultural car- goes and shipments, about 80 per cent of strikebound cargo, to and from Hawaii. Meanwhile, Sen. Robert Grif- fin, (R-Mich.) says he is "not very optimistic" that the Senate will do anything in the near fu- ture to force an end to the West Coast dock strike. Griffin said in a speech to the, Kalamazoo Rotary Club yester- day that he blamed inaction to political power of union lead- ers, saying that legislators, es- pecially in an election year, sim- ply don't want to do anything to upset a great number of union leaders. The bill goes into effect in 60 f days, and will apply to some of the last presidential primaries. It covers spending in television ra- dio, newspaper. magazine, and telephone advertising. No more than 60 per cent of total campaign expenditures can be spent on broadcast ads. Sta- tions selling air time to federal candidates must charge the low- est unit rate during the 45 days i before a primary and 60 days be-+ fore a general election. Backers says the legislation is designed to end secret campaign financing via District of Colum- bia and intrastate committees, and1 will be the first covering of spend- ing in primary elections. The President called the bill "realistic and enforceable," when he signed it without public cere- mony. Nixon vetoed an October, 1970, bill which limited only ra- dio and television expenditures. saying it plugged "only one hole in the sieve." The bill prevents newspapers and magazines from charging po- litical candidates more for cam- paign advertising than they charge for the use of the space by other advertisers. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of{ Michigan. News phone: 784-0552. SecondI 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. Sum er Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. suit against PayBoard WASHINGTON P) - The United Auto Workers yesterday presented the federal Pay Board with its first major lawsuit, ac- cusing it of acting illegally by denying a pay raise to aerospace workers. The long-promised suit alleges that the board exceeded its au- thority, ignored its own rules, failed to hold required public hear- ings, and based its action not on logic but on an assumption that aerospace workers would not strike their depressed industry. "We allege that the orders were taken on the basis of politics and administrative convenience, ratier than facts and reason," said UAW President Leonard Woodcock. Pay Board spokesmen had no comment. Target of the UAW suit is the Pay Board's rejection last Jan.-5 of contracts containing a 12 per cent first-year pay raise for .31,- 000 workers at three aerospace firms. The Pay Board said later it would allow a raise of 34 or 35 cents in the first year and intends to approve the rest if added to the second year of the three year contracts. Woodcock said work- ers are receiving the approved portion. I - "KAS PAR" a play by _Peter Handke Feb. 11th & 12th East Quad Auditorium Admission- 50c I x Ii 7 UAC DAYSTAR presents Gordon Lighifoot "finest singer among all the folk troubadors . . . A GREAT TRIP, he's euphoric." San Francisco Examiner a resounding artistic tri- umph."-Billboard COMING THIS SATURDAY Feb. 12-8 pm.-Hill Aud. 4.50 3.00 gen. adm. 1.50 Tickets daily Michigan Union 12-6 and both Salvation Record Stores SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY 9:30 A.M.. TO 5:30 P.M. P SA LE Jacobson's Own Panty Stockings 1.50 pr. ~ February 7th through February 19th. . A limited time to replenish your supply of fine V -- \/ ilir . i - - - - - - - - - -