page 2-Thursday, November 16, 1978-The Michigan Daily U.S. blamed for allowing poverty i I Regents to tackle tough issues By STEVEN SHAER Mick Taussig, medical an- thropologist, slammed capitalism as the cause of poverty and hunger racking the majority of the population in developing countries, as he ad- dressed over 60 people last night at the School of Public Health. "The present state of poverty (in developing countries) is not a natural condition. Neither can it be blamed on the population explosion," Taussig said. TAUSSIG EQUATED the capitalist system with imperialism and stated that the latter was a system based on force. "Thanks to United States interests, peasant farms decreased to be replaced by sugar plantations," Taussig said of the situation in Colombia. "In Colombia there is more than enough food to feed everyone. But un- der the market system, the people can't afford it," he said. TAUSSIG SAID that over half of the population of Colombia is hungry due to the capitalist infusion and that disease fflicts the people as a result of malnutrition. Preceding Taussig's talk was a movie showing the large movement of American businesses abroad in order to pay workers lower wages and escape high U.S. taxes\ The speaker and movie were part of the four-day program begun on Monday by the Committee Concerned with World Hunger. "Well-intentioned people come out of this school (School of Public Health) but modern medicine is a political tool that buttresses a pernicious ideology," Taussig said. Want to wake-up fast? Get on down to U-M Stylists at the UNION Open: 8:30 a.m. Mon.-Sat. "MEDICINE and nutrition are privileged tools allowing penetration of United States influence," Taussig said. He said ulterior motives to allow for maximum American investments in developing countries are behind many aid programs such as those coordinated by the Agency for International Development. "The philosophy of this group is not only Darwinian, it's to adapt the people to their misery," Taussig said. Not only were the resources of Third World countries being used for the benefit of the imperialist country, but the labor was also an essential part of the market system, Taussig added. "The people of the Third World are literally being consumed in the fire of their labor," Taussig commented about hard working conditions he says are pushed on the peasants. "We (United States), the consumers are literally cannibals living off our brothers in the Third World," he said. Today is the final day of the four-day hunger program and it features a rally on the diag at noon with social activist Wavy Gravy. Jupiter, the largest of the planets, is located at an average distance of 480 million miles from the sun and takes nearly 12 earth-years to accomplish a single circuit around the sun. B y MITCH CANTOR Dormitory food consolidation and the process for selecting the next Univer- sity president will be among several controversial issues to be discussed by the University Regents at their monthly meeting today and tomorrow. The eight-member board, which meets in the Administration Building, will review a report on food con- ,solidation submitted by Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff and Vice-President for Student Services Henry Johnson. THE REPORT recommends that a dining commons be constructed west of Mosher-Jordan to serve residents of Alice Lloyd, Cousens, Mosher-Jordan, and Stockwell Halls. The report cites extensive savings for future students (see related story, Page 1). Though not on the agenda, the presidential selection process will be brought up at least once during the meeting. Robert Nederlander (D- Birmingham) told the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) late last month that he would discuss with the other Regents today or tomorrow the possibility of making a "statement of intent" to give the student presidential advisory committee more involvement in the selection process "somewhere down the line." MSA DECIDED Tuesday night to participate in the process after boycot- ting it for a month. The student representatives claimed the guidelines passed by the Regents at their October meeting would not provide adequate student input in the later stages of the process. The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), which will have its yearly meeting with the Regen- ts tonight, will also call for im- provements in the presidential selec- tion process. In a letter sent to the Regents, SACUA members asked that the board "institute forms of con- tinuous communication, participation and consultation through to the end of the selection process." Several other controversial issues are likely to be brought up during the public comment session of today's meeting. Speakers are slated to ad- dress the Regents on the matters of: -The Sturgis Report, which recom- mends alterations in the Union,' -Political Science Assistant Professor Joel Samoff, who has twice been denied tenure by the University. Samoff recently filed an appeal with tt Literary College Executive Commitye -The Graduate Employe Organization (GEO), which is pressi tly involved in a court case with t University. The. outcome of tli hearings will determine whetly graduate student assistants at ti University may collectively barge' with the administration. Included in the agenda is cOr sideration of renewing the University contract with the Public Interest Grou in Michigan (PIRGIM). A significar ,change in the document requires l PIRGIM support frorf 22.5 per cent' the students if the University is to c$ tinue to include the PIRGIM check-0 on student verification forms. In th past, 33.3 per cent of the student bod was required to back PIRGIM for th five-year contract to be valid eac year. The board will also review Preside Robben Fleming's recommendatiD that he be allowed to appoint a nea director for the University's Affn mative Action Office. Social Justice, Critical Inquiry, Creative Teaching first CentennialProgram November 17, 1978 THE ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE CHAIR OF THE SCIENCE AND THE ART OF TEACHING AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 9:30 a.m. Rackham Amphitheatre COMMITMENTS OF THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION NORMAN DRACHLER, Ph.D. 1951 Professor Emeritus, Stanford University Former Superintendent, Detroit Public Schools THE DECADES AHEAD DEAN JOAN S. STARK School of Education 12:30 p.m. Luncheon Michigan League UNIVERSITY INVESTMENT IN PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION WALTER ADAMS Professor of Economics, Michigan State University 2:30 p.m. Rackham Amphitheatre EXPANSION OF EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY IN MICHIGAN Former State Senator GILBERT E. BU RSLEY 5:30 p.m. Social Hour 2nd floor, Michigan League Courtesy of Phi Delta Kappa SCHOOL OF EDUCATION The University of Michigan For information call: 763-4060 or 764-9470 LSA-SG votes to put! second slate on ballot NOON LUNCHEON SOUP and SANDWICH-504 Fri., Nov. 17-TOM MORSON, student advisor, counseling services: "The Politics of Counseling" at GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe I U d (Continued from Page 1) called if one-third of the council asks for it, according to Brazee. The meeting could be called at the request of two members because LSA-SG, normally a seventeen-member board, is currently sitting with six members due to the decision of LSA Judiciary not to certify last April's election because of violations of the Election Code. THE FATE OF another potential presidential candidate is still unclear. Warfield Moore filed for the presiden- tial spot by himself and cannot be per- mitted on the ballot. Strasberg has been unable to contact Moore. Although the council decided Moore could not be placed on the ballot at this time, Brazee said Moore might be able to run if Strasberg were able to reach him. The council also amended the times FRONT YARD FIND ROCHESTER, Ind. (AP) - When Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Jackson set out to dig a fish pond in front of their home, they had no idea they'd unearth the remains of some previous tenants. What they found, however, is more of a matter for paleontologists than for police. Jackson was digging away about five feet below ground level with heavy, earth-moving machinery when he struck something he took to be, a tree trunk. He hauled the object out, and then realized that he was looking at the tusk of a mastodon - a wooly prehistoric ancestor of the modern elephant. The Jacksons got in touch with Dr. James Bellis, head of the archeology department of the University of Notre Dame, who confirmed that the Jacksons had dug up the remains of not one, but two mastodons. and sites of the polling places for nex week's election. Here is the pol schedule: MONDAY Fishbowl: 8:30-4:30 Union Basement:1:30-7:30 Mosher-Jordan: 4:15-6:45 Markley: 4: QO-6:30 Alice Lloyd: 10: 15-6:15 East Quad: 11:00-7:00 TUESDAY Fishbowl: 8:45-4:15 Union Basement: 11:00-5:00 West Quad: 4:00-6:30 South Quad: 11:15-6:45 Modern Language Building: 10:00-2:45 C.C. Little Bus Stop: 10:45-3:45 Bursley: 3:15-7:00 If Strasberg is unable to hire enoug poll workers to staff all the polls, booth. at the Modern Language Building an Mosher-Jordan may be eliminated. weather permits, Fishbowl polls ma be put in the Diag. Daily Official Bulletin TIHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1978 Daily Calendar: Biological Science: Alfred L. Goldberg, Dept. n Physiology, Harvard Medical school, "Th Regulation of Protein Degradation in E. Coli, 1131 Nat.Sci.,1p.m. Ctr. Western European Studies: C. Gibson "Development and Decline of the Aztec Empire;' Aud. B., Angell, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: A. Mueller, Columbia-U. "Cut Vertices and Their Applications in QCD," 2031 Randall, 4 p.m. Guild House: Poetry reading, Stephen Dunning Kenyon Brown, 802 Monroe, 7:30 p. m. Romance'Languages/Literature: Nancy K. Mille "Emphasis Addes: Some Notes on Women and thi Novel," Lec. Rm. 1, MLB, 7:30 p.m. Music School: Mozart's "Marriage of Figaro;' Mendellsohn. 8 p.m. Chemistry: A. B. Harvey, "Laser Chemistry an spectroscopy," 1300 Chem., 8p.m. PLAI TALK f F i A JOB 1 ' rim Why too much regulation may rule you out How would you like to be forced to get permission from 379 separate Government agencies before you could work? That's what Armco has to do. We think you could hear a similar story from nearly any large company in America- if the regulatory paperwork leaves them any time to talk to you. Excessive regulation threatens your chance of getting a job. Most of us agree that the goals regulation seeks are important. Clean air and water. Job safety. Equal rights at work. The problem is the way Government people now write and apply specific rules to reach those goals. Too often, the rules don't really do the job. They just tie com- panies up in knots as they try to comply. Last year, federal regulations took up a twelve-foot shelf of textbook-size volumes printed in small type. 13,589 more pages were written last year alone. And Washington isI more than matched by a growing army of state and local happens to a company's jobs is. Here's an example: Safety regulations require companies to install special guards over electrical components to protect people from being electrocuted. Like most industrial companies, Armco has scores of giant, built-in electrical cranes to handle huge loads. Their electrical components are in the top of each crane, high away from the plant floor. To maintain and repair the electrical system, safety guards have to be re- moved so work can be done. Except for expert electricians, no one ever goes up on top of a crane. Yet unless we win a special dispensation, we'll have to install a useless set of guards on every Armco crane at a total cost of some $6,000,000. That wastes enough money to create 120 new Armco jobs, right there. Even though Armco people are ten times safer on the job than they are away from work. Next time anybody calls for a new regulation, you might ask for some sensible analysis of the costs and benefits- including how many jobs might be lost. One of those jobs could be yours. Let us hear YOUR plain talk about jobs! We'll send you a free booklet if you do Does our message make sense to you? We'd like to know what you think. Your personal ex- periences. Facts to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We'd like your plain talk. For telling us your thoughts, we'll send you more information on issues affecting jobs. Plus Armco's famous handbook, How to Get a Job. It answers 50 key questions you'll need to know. Use it to set yourself apart, above the crowd. regulators.v Nobody really knows how much money regulation costs. Some say it's up to $40 billion a year. Spread that cost out over everybody and it comes to almost $200 a year for every man, woman and child in America. Companies paying the bill can't use that money for jobs. A new job, on the aver- age, now costs a company $45,300 in capital investment. (Armco's own cost is $57,520.) At $45,300 per job, regulation last year ate up the money which could have created 900,000 new jobs. No sensible American wants to dismantle r all Government regulation. But we tiyth 1.A cvtpm ca...nnn ha a.ra..an A in 25 years. If you n a college ring that's different from traditional rings, come see ArtCarved's outstanding collection for men and women. Ever since ArtCarved m