3 second front page 94Q Sfrig!3n aai,ti1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tonight and Saturday the 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. Friday, June 13, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three t""' ' PRINCESS and the FROG "The best city folk duo to come out of Detroit" the news today by The Associated Press and Colege Press Service Apollo moon I . i . i S r L J tfT ATE v Jo NOW Shows at r, *s' 1:00-3:00 5:00-7:00 9:05 SHOWING THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION launched its broadest attack to date on combination drugs yesterday, ordering off the market49 commonly used antibiotics which it said are ineffective or dangerous. The action involving 21 drug-makers came three weeks after a House subcommittee accused the FDA of dragging its feet in the long campaign to regulate the rapidly increasing popularity of com- bination drugs. The subcommittee also accused the FDA of concealing for 10 weeks a white paper that had described most of the drugs as unsafe. The study by the National Academy of Sciences and the National Research Council said that combination drugs can cause adverse side effects ranging from minor skin rashes to death. FDA Commissioner Herbert Ley told the subcommittee that he withheld the report because he wanted to. act against all suspected antibiotic combinations, at one time rather than piecemeal. GENERAL JOHN D. RYAN, former chief of the Strategicg Air Command, will become the next Air Force chief of staff, Pentagon sources announced yesterday. Ryan, 53 years old, is being elevated from vice chief of staff and will succeed General John P. McConnell, whose term expires August 1. Upon confirmation by the Senate, he will serve a four-year term and will sit with the Joint Chiefs of Staff along with the top officers in the Army, Navy, and Marines. * * *' * PRIME MINISTER OF ISRAEL Golda Meir yesterday called on the big powers to end their search for a Mideast settlement, and to leave the Arabs and Israelis to negotiate their own peace. In London, for Mideast talks with Prime Minister Harold Wilson and other British leaders, Mrs. Meir contended the big power talks had relieved Arab leaders of a need to face reality and deal directly with Israel. Representatives of the four big power nations-the United States,- Soviet Union, Great Britain, and France--are meeting in New York on Mideast peace possibilities. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko currently is in Cairo conferring with President Gamal Abdel Nasser on acceptability of peace proposals put forward by the United States and others. . * THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT OF SAIGON yesterday replaced the Viet Cong's National Libe'ration Front as a bargaining agent at the Paris peace talks. The United States and South Vietnam averted what might have developed into a major controversy by declaring that the change was one of name only and it would have no effect on the character.of the, talks. The newly-named government includes the Viet Cong and groups backed by the guerrillas and North Vietnam. Nguyen Thi Binh, who replaced Tran Buu Kiem as head of the delegation, formally notified the delegates assembled at the twenty- first full-scale session of the talks that the NLF had transferred all its state 'functions to the provisional government. South Vietnam's chief negotiator, Plan Dang Lam, ignored the new developments in his prepared speech, but he circulated a state- ment formally declaring his government's nonrecognition of the new regime. * * * * THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT has ordered the South Carolina Medical College Hospital in Charleston, South Carolina, to rehire twelve blacks whose dismissal in March touched off a strike by 500 other employes. Re-employment is one the workers' demands for settlement. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare, in a letter dated June 5, directed the hospital to return the twelve to its staff with back pay or face the loss of at least $12-million in Federal funds. "I don't know what we will do," said William D. Huff, a Medical Colege vice president yesterday. ege y - pres landing Wins final approval WASHINGTON (A} - The space agency gave the signal yesterday for a July 16 launch of man's first attempt to land on the moon. If preparations for Apollo 11 continue to go smoothly, Neil A. Armstrong, 38, Col. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., 39, and Lt. Col. Michael Collins, 38, will be launched from Cape Kennedy, Fla., at 9:32 a.m. EDT Wednesday, July 16. On this schedule, Armstrong and Aldrin will touch down cautiously on the moon in the spidery lunar module at 2:22 p.m. EDT July 20, on the Sea of Tranquility. At 10 minutes past midnight July 21, Armstrong is to step down from the spacecraft to become the first human be- ing to set foot on the moon.? -Associated Press Apollo program director Phillips MAFIA PROBSE: Keleygrand jury unaffected b bl LANSING R)---Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley's request for a one-man grand jury investigation of organ- ized crime in Oakland County would not be affected by pending legislation to do away with single- juror probing. The bill, which now faces Sen- ate consideration after a 99-0 House approval Wednesday, pro- poses to expand citizen grand jury powers effective Oct. 1 in replacement of one-man grand juries. Any "proceedings pending" at that time, however, would con- tinue under present grand jury provisions of the criminal code. Thus, an investigating judge. armed with power to subpoena witnesses, grant them immunity from prosecution orcharge them with contempt of court for fail- ure to cooperate would have one year to seek information for in- dictments in Oakland County. Critics of the one-man system, instituted in 1917, have charged it is costly, inefficient and subject to political influence. Senate adoption of the measure is uncertain'. previous attempts to eliminate the lone juror have failed there. Leon Cohan, deputy attorney general said, "it really is impos- sible" to determine if the- Kelley probe will be the 'last one-man grand jury. The two ranking members of the Senate Judiciary Committee meanwhile, disagreed on the chances of the house bill creating a citizens' grand jury system to replace the one-man grand jury passing the Senate. Sen. Robert Huber (R-Troy), a critic of . Kelley's Mafia probe, said he did not think the meas- ure would gain Senate approval. "People are finding out that one-man grand juries, honestly have not been producing bad re- sults," he said. U.S.bloceks' Cleaver funds WASHINGTOt (/)-The Treas-' ury Departrfhent has blocked the U.S. financial assets 'of black militant Eldridge Cleaver on grounds that he is illegally in Cuba, the State Department said yesterday. Press officer Robert J. McClos- key said the clampdown on Cleav- er's funds was taken under Cuban control regulations issued under the Trading with the Enemy Act. Cleaver, a leader in the Black Panther organization and author of the best-selling look "Soul on Ice," is wanted in California to serve out a 13-year prison sen- tence for assault with intent to kill and assault with a deadly .weapop. Aldrin will j oi n him about half an hour later. The astronauts are to leave the moon at 12 noon July 21 to rejoin Collins in t h e moon-orbiting command module. After a three-day return trip, ,they are to splash down in the Pacific near the aircraft carrier Hornet, north of the Equator near Johnston Island, at 12:52 p.m. July 24. This schedule became firm fol- lowing a telephone conference yes- terday among key officials of the program. Prior to that, there had been a possibility that the mission would be postponed for one month to provide more time for training and for study of the problems that de- veloped during the Apollo 10 mis-' sion arbund the moon., In a five-page announcement, the National Aeronautics a n d Space Administration said the de- cision to continue preparations for the July 16 launch was based in large part "on a review of 'the current status a n d remaining training schedule for the Apollo 11 astronauts and the ground flight control team" and on a re- view of Apollo 10 flight difficul- ties. The agency left the way open fdr slight changes if they become necessary. "At any time between now and launch on July 16, we will not hes- itate to postpone if we feel we are not ready in every way," said Lt. Gen. Sam C. Phillips, Apollo pro- gram director. "Nor, once the voyage has be- gun would we hesitate to bring the crew home immediately if we encounter problems," he added. The planned moon landing is to take place in sunlight at a 10 de- gree angle so that surface con- ditions are clearly defined by deep shadows. While Aldrin photographs the event with a color television cam- era, Armstrong will descend onto the moon and collect a scoopfull of luna.r surface material. Armstrong then will photograph Aldrin when he emerges. The men will deposit on. t h e moon surface an experiment pack- age to measure moon quake ac- tivity after they leave. k~i~iN~NiN WINNINAG..S EBRYTHN! AIc sr n . HSV mecT9 PIOaUCf 0 B MAEW SM " HOWARD IDAN JAMES COLDTOE "JOHN FOREM ARMM JEIW LNG 'ICTIDN" A UHfE4INE IAMA-W OREA TURE 1 ~TECHNIOOGlO.R PANAVSlONe Tax reief added, to surtaxbill WASHINGTON(A'-Relief 'for lowest-income taxpayers was tied to a bill extending the surtax yes- terday in a bid for quick conres sional approval of President Nix on's anti-inflation program. The House Ways and Means Committee agreed informally on the package, which has the ap- proval of be administration and' leaders of both parties in the House. °Bu.t Democrats insisting ow broader tax reform now and only a limited extension of the surtax said they will try to defeat the measure unless they can reshape it to their liking. The committee ordered the bill drafted for a vote Monday. Acting Chairman Hale Boggs (D-ILa.) predicted committee approval and House leaders prepared for quieki action thereafter. Unless House and Senate comi- ,plete action earlier, the staX expires at mlc night June 30-a,' deadline that wil be hard to meet under the most favorable circum- stances. The key "sweetener" added to the surtax extension measure is a Nixon Treasury proposal estimat- ed to relieve 2 million low income families entirely of income tax and to provide some tax relief for a total of 13 million persons. It is a graduated 10 w income allowance that would be added to the present standard deduction. The sliding scale is computed according to family size so that no family at the officially deter- mined poverty level would be i- able to tax. For incomes above that level, the allowance would scale down and disappear.' For example: A family of four now is considered to be at t h e poverty level if its income Is $3,- 500. But under present law it would begin paying t a x on In- come over $3,000. The tax would be $74 at income of $3,500. Under the proposal, there would be no tax due at $3,500. The fam- ily would get some tax relief so long as its income did not exceed $4,500. ------~CoUP1ON' ------ THOMPSON'S': PIZZA 761-0001 .. r O $1.00 OFF. : i One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. r Pick Up Only I 211 E. Ann St.-Next to the Armory r r i Expires Aug. 1 #. r Ir - m mmm mmmmmm Em m -mem--pns' I-- -. 1' -NEW LOC.ATION.-1 A~LL N5i u 9. 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