The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 2, 1978--Page 11 Ala. senator Allen dead at 65 GULF SHORES, Ala. (AP) - U.S. Sen. James B. Allen, (D-Ala.), died Thursday after suffering an apparent heart attack, a friend of the family said. Allen was 65. Allen's death was confirmed by Mobile Press-Register State Editor Buddy Smith, who said his wife was with Mrs. Allenin the hospital chapel. Ben Davis, a longtime newspaper executive vacationing at Gulf Shores, said witnesses told him Allen seemed to suffer a heart attack and then fell down stairs at a condominium. He said the witnesses described Allen as looking "ashen and in awfully bad shape" and that paramedics had to get him breathing again. TOM COKER, an aide to Allen, left Montgomery to go to South Baldwin Hospital in Foley, where the senator was taken after "some kind of attack," Coker's wife said. Allen was a leader among foes of the two Panama Canal treaties that were approved by the Senate March 16 and April 18. Because he frequently held the Senate floor for hours on end during the debate, his voice became known to millions who listened to the live broad. cast of the proceedings on National Public Radio. THE SENATOR consistently referred to Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos as "Dictator Torrijos," a characterization known to have angered Torrijos. The conservative Alabama senator, known as a master of Senate rules, frequently delayed or blocked liberal proposals over the years by sustaining filibusters on the Senate floor. He offered few legislative proposals of his own and was probably the most conservative figure among Senate Democrats in recent years. ALLEN WAS born Dec. 28, 1912 in Gadsden, Ala., where he attended public schools. He received his college training at the University of Alabama and his law degree from that in- stitution's law school. He began his law practice in 1936 in Dadsden, where he practiced until retiring on Dec. 31, 1968 to devote full time to his duties in the Senate. He served in the Alabama statehouse as state representative from 1938 to 1942. He was re-elected to that post in 1942 but resigned to serve in the U.S. Navy from 1943 to 1946 stationed in the Pacific theater. He was a member of the Alabama Senate from 1946 to 1950 and was Alabama lieutenant governor for two terms from 1951 to 1955 and 1963 to 1967. Syrians consent (ContinuedfromPage1) Assad hinted he will try to work out a peaceful coexistence formula between Palestinians and the Lebanese army in the south. "IT IS NOT impossible to harmonize the two issues," he said. But he declined to elaborate, saying "what concerns the Palestine Liberation Organization we shall discuss with PLO leadership." Assad or his foreign minister, Abdul Halim Khaddam, was expected to meet soon with Arafat to discuss the outcome of the Latakia summit. Asked whether Syrian troops in Lebanon would be allowed to enter south Lebanon with the Lebanese ar- my, Assad said;'These troops are under President Sarkis' command. We wan- ted to move deeper south in the past but we heeded President Sarkis'orders not to." Public ignores cancer warnings (Continued on Page 2) the artificial sweetener to bladder can- to their disease. cer in male rats. "Nothing has Opponents of the proposed saccharin changed," said one company official. bansue that a normal person must BILL JONES, a general sales consume 600 12ounce cans of diet soda manager of the Coca-Cola Bottling daily during an average lifespan to Works Co., makers of diet Tab, sum- equal the dosage fed test rats. med up the prevailing mood: "I don't And a University of Pittsburgh think the signs will make any differen- physicist said the benefits of diet drinks ce. Look at the warnings on cigarettes. outweigh the risks attached to excess They're selling more now than ever." weight. Dr. Bernard L. Cohen, in Scien- Pharmacies, however, report a dif- ce Magazine, wrote, "... substitution of ferent story. Sales of saccharin tablets diet for non-diet drinks would increase are way down, but the new warnings life expectancy by 100 times more than are anticlimactic. the cancer risk reduced it." "We stopped getting saccharin customers last year," said Ben Rose, a New York City pharmacist. "Saccharin Francois Truffaut's 1976 in bottles is more forbidding than in pink packets. People can more easily SMALL CHANGE ignore the possible threat when they Truffaut's warm, we lerful and buy Sweet 'n' Low, and many just don't whimsical exploration of childhood realize an 'artificial sweetener' usually from the brave curiosity of a toddler reize a'artific swostto the exciting embarassment of is saccharin," he said. adolescent love. In color, French The new warning, which must appear (with subtitles) and a beautiful 35 even in the smallest convenience store mm print. selling saccharin products, was sat: ADAM'S RIB authorized after Congress delayed for sun: CHAPLIN (free) 18 months a proposed Federal Food and Drug Administration ban on the ar- CINEMA GUILD tificial sweetener. The delay came after Congress and Toni a :30 930 the FDA were deluged by letters from $So consumers protesting the ban. A $1.4 million study is under way to in- vestigage 3,0 bladder cancer patients to determine what factors contributed CINEMA II presents CAMILLE Director-GEORGE CUKOR, 1936 The screen adaptation of Dumas' LA DAME AUX CAMELIA, portrays Greta Garbo as a tragic courtesan dying of TB in 19th century Paris, with Robert Taylor as her lover. Garbo's exquisite performance (cough, cough) and Cukor's stylish direction turned an otherwise absurd tale into a distinguished piece of film craft. Bring your hankies. $1.50 7:30 & 9:30 ANGELL HALL, AUD A TOMORROW; .Rrir's."THE RIVER" i i i r i I