Wednesday, August , 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven -A , -'-' DAL Pa. . Seven FDA hopes to ease ice cream ingredient rules WASHINGTON (MP-"But what will this do to spumoni?" asked Rep. Leon Panetta. "Not a thing," Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commis- sioner Donald Kennedy replied yesterday to a packed House hearing room. THE HEARING, which melted into laughter at the California Democrat's question, concerned the serious subject of what man- ufacturers will be allowed to put in the 800 million gallons of ice cream they provide annually to the American public. The FDA has proposed a regu- lation that would allow dairy produc's such as non-fat dry milk to be replaced by milk-de- rived ingredients, including a cheap imported substance called cassinate. "This will guarantee product quality just as well as the old recipe," Kennedy told skeptical legislators. KENNEDY insisted that "the new standard will produce ice cream that has the nutritional equivalent and the equivalent in waste and texture of what we are used to." ll =Z-tp VITIO. 1-jr, L M4 6 WWI L M L i1 I _., STUDENT NIGHT ONCE UPON A TIME R 516 E. LIBERTY MORE INFO? 994-5350 t r. AMP; 4 im ANN AACI0 FILM CC-C Wednesday, August 3 ENTER THE DRAGON (Robert Clouse; 1974) 7 & 9-AUD. A This is the finest of all Bruce Lee epics. John Saxton, Fred Williamson, and the ureof Zen martyr to Killer Karate, Bruce Lee. Follow Adventure's Trail to the veiled Orient-and to the ultimate contest with consummate olavers. America invented violence in the movies. Bruce Lee makes it balletic. Death to the impure at heart! AIEEE!! ADMISSION: STILL ONLY $1.25 Bad news bunny AP Photo Harvey, the ASPCA's "attack" rabbit views some tennis balls at his quarters in New York recent- ly. The biting bunny has been picked to serve as a guest umpire at a tennis match between Play- boy bunnies and celebrities. KGB S Ve quizzes * t Soviet poet MOSCOW -0P) - Soviet p o e t Vladimir Kornilov said yester- day he had been questioned for more than two hours by the KGB security police about his relationship with Yuri Orlov, jailed head of a Moscow human rights panel. Orlov, a 52-year-old nuclear physicist, has been held by So- viet authorities since his arrest last February. He is reported to be facing charges of anti-Soviet slander, which carry a maxi- mum sentence of three years in a labor camp. EIGHT OTHER members of the Moscow group and similar panels in other Soviet cities, formed to monitor Soviet com- pliance with human rights pro- visions of the Helsinki accords, are currently in custody. Kornilov, 48, was expelled from the official Soviet Union of Writers last March after being described as a "renegade" for publishing some of his works in the West. 10:10 AND 10:40 SNOWS $. a LLO mHEna$ 3. A-time ago in a galaxy farfar away.. 2 10:10 3:45 10:40 6:45 12 DC571 1:15 9.15 3:15 ~945 S NO DISCOUNTS NO PASSES the 3 10:15 12:15 2:20 4:30 6:45 9:00 9,EPERT ORY'77 CONTINUES.. By ((. L l(t>A A' JULY 28; 31 & AUGUST 3.6 in the POWER CENTER for the performing arts For Ticket Iiformation Call: (313) 764 0450 Y i JoAeh F Levine presents A BRIDXE 1(X) FARI 10:30 2:00 6:00 9:30