free Tuesday, July 2, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Th Tuesday, July 2, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page T~ ~ree 'oters ask for reform, Soviets detain maintain Associated Press News Analysis PARIS, President Charles de Gaulle's regime, which won a+ smashing election victory on a+ platform of generalities, is under pressure now to come up with spe- cific reforms for the troubled % French monetary system, schools and industries. Premier Georges Pompidou of- fered no firm solutions in a talk with newsmen but said the coun- try, torn by weeks of strikes and student unrest, wants a return to unity. 1 "France has gotten out of a Gaullist regime U.S. transport very grave crisis," Pompidou said. "We saw the desire for a renewal of the country during the electoral campaign. "In effect we feel that we were on the brink of civil war." "The country wants the divi- sions to be healed and unity to return. There are, of course, re- forms to be carried out, but we are aware that every reform has its inconveniences. "Therefore, for these incon- veniences to be opposed, the ma- jority must be united." As for government ranks in the End tariff barriers in Common Market PARIS (P)-The Common Mar- ket leadership urged major new steps yesterday toward creating a United States of Europe as the last tariff barriers disappeared among the six member nations, France, West Germany, Italy, Bel- glum, Holland and Luxembourg. The 14-man Executive Commis- sion, under President Jean Roy, asked an end to the veto power for each nation more power for itself and real powers for the European Parliament. President Charles de Gaulle's opposition has stood in the way of these steps. At the same time, the Common Market and Britain-barred from the club by De Gaulle-put into effect 40 per cent of the tariff cuts pledged to the United States and most of the rest of the world 4in the Kennedy Round agreement a year ago. They were joined by a dozen other countries. U.S. trade is expected to bene- fit considerably. The Kennedy Round tariff cuts will affect U.S. exports that were worth more than $8 billion last year. The cuts could increase this trade by hundreds of millions of dollars, helping the U.S. balance of payments and cutting down the drain of gold from American re- serves. The picture was darkened by new emergency restrictions on French trade imposed by De Gaul- le's government. Imports of tex- tiles, automobiles and some other important products are to be lim- ited. French exporters are to get new subsidies, which annoys ex- porters in other countries. Representatives of the world's major trading nations met in Geneva yesterday to consider the French measures, fearful that re- prisals and counterreprisals could create new barriers harder to surmount than the old ones. new National Assembly, he said: "I believe we will have unanimous adhesion and I hope it will stay that way for five years." Pompidou had met at the Orsay Palace on the Seine with jubilant government legislators, assured in the second round voting Sunday of 355 seats in the 487-seat Na- tional Assembly. Making up the roll in this big- gest election landslide in France since the victory of a nationalist coalition in 1919 were 299 Gaul- lists, 53 Independent Republicans and 3 pro-De Gaulle independents. Some eight other independent rightists may pledge their sup- port to the government when the new assembly convenes July 11. The opposition would muster only 122 seats. These were 33 Communists, a loss of 40 seats; 57 members of the Federation of the Democratic and Socialist left, a loss of,61; the centrist Party of Progress and Modern Democracy 29, a loss of 10; and three inde- pendent leftists. The exact way in which De Gaulle will use his majority has been the subject of much specula- tion, in the press as well as on the street. "Failure will lead us straight to chaos," the conservative party's newspaper Le Figaro said yester- day. The moderate rightist L'Aurore said the regime has a free hand to do what it wishes. L'Humanite, the French Com- munist party newspaper, declared: "The coalition of money, hate and fear has won a provisional vic- tory." De Gaulle himself has only hinted that the May revolution demands for "structural reforms" in education and industry should be met with increased student responsibility and a share for workers in direction of their plants. Students and others have been meeting continuously for six weeks trying to draw up recom- mendations, but few of these have been revealed. Those that have, proved to be as vague as De Gaulle's state- ments. Especially crucial in coming months will be the French econ- omy. France faces a situation which could lead to devaluation of the franc and probably soaring infla- tion beginning in September after the return from the traditional August vacation period. -Associated Press Reach out... Extending the hand that used to dole out pills in the neighborhood pharmacy, former druggist and now presidential candidate Hubert Horatio Humphrey shakes hands with eager Ohioans at the Burke Lakefront Airport in Cleveland. Accompanied by Cleveland Mayor Carl B. Stokes, Humph- rey was on a 24-hour campaigning visit. FTC hits cigarette advertiing at Yokota. Washington at once pressed for release of the plane and the men, acting through the U.S. ambassa- dor to Moscow, Llewellyn Thomp- son, and with the Soviet ambassa- dor here, Anatole Dobrynin. But at a mid-afternoon news briefing a State Department spokesman said Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin told Thompson only that the case is under in- vestigation and gave no assur- ances the aircraft would be freed soon. The incident came at a time when representatives of both countries, along with those of many other nations, met in Wash- ington to, hail the signing of a treaty designed to limit the spread of nuclear weapons. 'White House authorities said they doubt the plane Incident, which they termed unfortunate, would disrupt those proposed talks. Robert J. McCloskey added "We continue to be in touch with the Soviet government and hope that the plane and its crew will be returned," While officials here doubt that Moscow would risk a major inci- dent by keeping the plane and its occupants, they recognize 'that it offers a touchy issue for the Kremlin since the transport was bearing troops to fight against a Soviet ally in Vietnam. Any quick release would be like- ly to bring strong condemnation from Red China and perhaps oth- ers in the Communist world. WASHINGTON () - A troop-carrying U.S. airliner bound for Vietnam was forced to land on a Soviet island late Sunday. Moscow gave no assurances yesterday of an early release for the aircraft and its 231 passengers. The Seaboard-World Airlines charter was taking 214 sol- diers and sailors to Vietnam when it was intercepted by Soviet MIG fighter planes and forced to land on Interup Island in the Pacific Kurile chain. The Pentagon said the DC8 plane apparently strayed off course en route from Seattle, Wash., to Yokota, Japan, and flew into Soviet air space. Its had a scheduled refueling stopI 7 Aircraft carrying 231 to Vietnam forced to land on Russian island lDemand NOW SHOWING NATIONAL. GENERAL CORPOR~ATON O_ FOX MASTERN T EATRES COMPLETE TIMES F VIL GE 1:00-3:00-5:00 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7691300 7:15 - 9:30 WEDNESDAY 7-10-68 SHOWINGS AT 5:00 - 7:15 - 9:30 WASHINGTON W) -- Congress was urged yesterday to prohibit cigarette advertising on television and radio - and was told si- multaneously that cigarette smok- ing can shorten life by up to eight years. The double-barreled foray came in separate reports to Congress by the Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Public Health Serv- ice. The FTC asked for an adver- tising ban, while the PHS report- ed there's new evidence to back its repeated contentions that cig- arette smoking imperils health and can be death-dealing. Three of the five members of the FTC, in the agency's annual report to Congress on cigarette advertising, recommended the television and radio ban on such advertising. And the whole commission backed a new and tougher warn- ing statement on cigarette pack- ages and said this also should be required in all advertisements. The proposed warning would read: "Cigarette smoking is danger- ous to health and may cause death from cancer and other diseases." The warning now required says only: "Caution: Cigarette smok- ing may be hazardous to your health." The PHS in a 176-page report prepared by the agency's Nation- al Clearinghouse for Information on Smoking and Health, said evi- dence accumulated during the past year shows that life-expec- tancy among heavy smokers can be reduced by more than eight years on the average, as a result of smoking. It said light smokers risk a de- creased life expectancy of about four years. In a foreword to the report, Sur- geon General William H. Stewart of the Health Service declared that in the last 12 months, "evi- dence attesting to the harmful effect of smoking on health has continued to mount." The agency's report - entitled "The Health Consequences of Smoking".- was designed to up- date a report made by the service a year ago, as well as the original Surgeon General's Report on Smoking and Health made in 1964. The 1964 report blasted cigar- ette smoking as the alleged major cause of lung cancer in men, and it said such smoking is a contrib- utory cause of other killer dis- eases. The newest report, in addition to highlighting an alleged short- ened -life-expectancy as a result of cigarette smoking, puts new stress on alleged contributory links between cigarette smoking and heart disease. "Alternatively, cigarette adver- tising on television and radio should be limited as to the hours at which it may appear, the ex- tent to which it may appear, and the types of programs on which it may appear." new dollar controls WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate-House Economic Committee proposed yesterday that Congress instruct the Federal Reserve Sys- .tem to keep the money supply growing at an annual rate of from 2 to 6 per cent. The committee says this range should not be made mandatory on the Federal Reserve, an independ- ent agency within the government, but that whenever any quarter's growth is greater or smaller than this range, the 'Fed" should be required to report promptly on the reasons. TO CONTINUE The reports should be made to the committee. or some other ap- propriate agency of Congress, the committee report continues. It adds that, as a regular pro- cedure, Federal Reserve authori- ties should each year "set forth publicly. as specifically as possible their notion of what kind of monetary policy the expected state of the economy calls for." Even these requirements would constitute an unprecedented con- gressional oversight of the actions of the Federal Reserve Board. Although it was created by Congress and is appointed by the President, the board steadily has maintained its autonomy. Its objectives are to restrain in- flation with tighter money poli- cies and avert slumps by easing the money supply. Chairman William Proxmire, (D-Wis.), says the committee's re- port, based on a series of hearings on the Fed's performance, "breaks sharply" with Congress' tradition- al policy. INSTRUCTION It tells the Fed to adopt a con- stant and moderate monetary pro- gram and instructs them to "tell us whenever they depart from it." He says the agency "has a rec- ord of deepening almost every re- cession or depression we have suf- fered in the last 30 years by re- ducing the money supply . . It has often excessively increased the money supply to fan the flames of inflation when the econ- omy has been booming." The committee report says the Federal Reserve has been given general guidelines by Congress, but "virtually no official help as to how it should weigh the various objectives, assign priorities, or se- lect among them when they come into conflict." National news roundup WAAVSIOWTECHW0OR" A PARAMO0UNT PICTUR COPE FOR SHERIFF HELP RESTORE PRIDE IN THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE Please make your check payable to Copi for Sheriff and send it to R. Sauve, Treasurer, 1315 Cam- bridge, Ann Arbor. By The Associated Press KEY WEST, Fla. - Fourteen kidnapped airline passengers re- turned to U.S. soil from Havana yesterday, leaving behind a gun- wielding hijacker and the plane's pilot who was jailed for defect- ing from Cuba in 1960. ' Passengers identified the hi- jacker as a well-dressed, polite man who -was listed on the flight manifest as E. H. Carter. After spending two days in Cu- ban hotels, the Americans were flown to Key West, their original destination, aboard the same DC3 that was diverted to Havana at gunpoint Saturday. The plane's pilot, George Prel- lezo, 37, a naturalized American citizen with a wife and five chil- dren in Miami, was held in a Cu- ban cell for trial. WASHINGTON - Richard M. Nixon never has been stronger with Republicans but he rarely has been weaker with the rest of the electorate, the Harris poll re- ported yesterday. The survey says that only 31 per cent of those polled list them- selves as Republicans, leaving the former Vice President a major problem in trying to sway Demo- crats and independents if he wins the Republican presidential nom- ination. Among Republicans, Nixon is reported holding an edge of 60 per cent to 31 per cent over Gov. Nel- son A. Rockefeller of New York, his only major challenger -- a gain of nine points since May. In trial heats against Democrats Hubert H. Humphrey and Eugene J. McCarthy, Nixon holds more than 75 per cent of the Republi- can vote whereas Rockefeller gets no more than 60 per cent GOP backing against these opponents, the poll reports. The poll says further that Nixon trails Humphrey 35 to 41 per cent among voters over 50 years of age. I I I I. I WOMEN'S Ii ,- = SHOE SALE OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE of quality footwear by .. . 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