I Z I acr iaft ath Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students ct the University of Michigan futures past Good astronauts do not good heroes make by d avc chudwin I 420 Maynard 'St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: ALAN LENHOFF Chile: Conflict, over copper ON THE Latin American political scene, traditionally characterized by mili- tary dictatorships and feudal social structures, guerrilla revolts and palace coups-all generally beyond the reach of a disenfranchised populace-Chile's po- litical system has long stood out as a car- dinal example of democratic process. In recent years, the Chilean govern- ment had been a liberal one, and the United States could point to Chile to show that revolution was not the inevit- able path for Latin America. But reflecting the rising expectations of the Chilean people, last year's election brought Calvador Allende, a Socialist, to power. AND NOW our government has been challenged to clearly define its rela- tionship to his regime-and has another chance to choose as its policy priority be- tween the self-determination of other nations and the defense of American- owned enterprises. Copper is the crucial export product of the Chilean economy, and it has been owned and developed by American com- panies. Under the Christian Democratic regime which preceded Allende's, the Chilean government was purchasing a 51 per cent share in the companies' Chilean properties. Full nationalization seemed assured with the accession of a Socialist govern- ment, but it remained unclear whether compensation would be paid for the mines. Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JIM BEATTIE DAVE CHUDWiIN Executive Editor Managing Editor STEVE KOPPMAN . .. Editorial Page Editor RICK PERLOFF .. Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY ... Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER .. . Associate Managing Editor LARRY LEMPERT .. Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE ............. ........ Arts Editor JIM IRWIN.................Associate Arts Editor JANET FREY .............Personnel Director ROBERT CONROW .. ... .. . Books Editor JIM JUDKIS. ......,......Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Lindsay. Chaney, Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald, Tammy Jacobs, Alan Lenhoff, Jonathan Miller, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Robert Schreiner, W.E. Schrock, Geri Sprung. COPY EDITORS: Art Lerner, Debra Thal. DAY EDITORS: Pat Bauer, Linda Dreeben, Jim Irwin, Hannah Morrison, Chris Parks, Gene Robin- son, Zachary Schiller. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Ric Bohy, Kenneth Conn, John Mitchell, Beth Oberfelder, Kristin Ringstrom, Kenneth Schulze, Tony Schwartz, Jay Sheyevitz, Gloria Jane Smith, Sue Stark, Ted Stein, Paul Travis, Marcia Zoslaw. Sports Staff MORT NOVECK, Sports Editor JIM KEVRA, Executive Sports Editor RICK CORNFELD .. Associate Sports Editor TERRI POUCHEY....... Contributing Sports Editor BETSY MAHON .. .... Senior Night Editor SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Bill Alterman, Bob An- drews, Sandi Genis, Joel Greer, Elliot Legow. John Papanek, Randy Phillips, Al Shackelford. Business Staff Last week, Allende indicated his gov- ernment will not compensate Anaconda and Kennecott-the two major copper companies-for their properties. Allende's rationale is that the profits the companies garnered over the years were so exorbitant that they far more than compensated the value of the mines. The rightness of Allende's plans can be the subject of endless debate with agree- ment virtually unreachable between those who hold pro-capitalist and pro- socialist views. Even the long-range wisdom of Al- lende's plans is debatable. The Chilean government has said it still seeks some private investment, which it seems un- likely to receive if investors fear their properties will be taken over without compensation. BUT THE COURSE our government should take is clear. There has been talk of a "get tough" policy against Chile and other govern- ments who don't pay "fair compensa- tion" to American companies whose pro- perties they nationalize. Economic sanctions by the U.S. against these countries can have very significant effects-in cutoffs of aid and loans both directly from the U.S. and from multi- national lending agencies in which the U.S. has major influence, and in future trade arrangements. The consequences of U.S. action against Chile must be carefully examin- ed. If the U.S. acts against Chile as a warning to other underdeveloped states to deal more favorably with American business holdings, it will be using the nation's power on behalf of groups of Americans who invest their money in underdeveloped countries and reap gen- erally large profits. At the, same time, it will be acting against the principles of -national self- determination which the U.S. purports to uphold. Aid it will serve to 'further alienate the United States from Third World nations seeking to establish na- tional identity and economic indepen- dence. THE ELECTED GOVERNMENT of the Chilean people has decided not to compensate for the copper mines. The question of compensation should be a matter between the Chilean government and those stockholders who own the two corporations, and should have no ef- fect on relations between our two na- tions. International investors can re- taliate, by refusing to invest in Chile. But U.S. foreign policy-whose force, in power and wealth, is drawn from the manpower and productivity of this entire nation-must not be used once again to protect the interests of those Americans who seek to profit by exploiting the re- sources of poorer nations. T HEY WERE trying very hard. You could tell they were not professional celebrities like actors or politicians - their jokes didn't have the polished timing and they used words like "anorthosite" and "breccia" a lot. They walked out on the s t a g e, smiling as the crowd of engineer- ing students and professors ap- plpuded, but it was unclear whe- ther the smiles were of genuine pleasure or the forced grins of people newly in the limelight. The three men of Apollo 15 had come back to the University, a good quarter of a million miles from the lunar surface they had pranced on weeks before. Y e t, they looked more like young cor- poration executives than heros or astronauts (and NASA would have us believe the two are synony- mous). In the early days of project Mercuryit was easysto remember their names. Shepard, Grissom, Glenn, Slayton, Carpenter, Schir- ra, Cooper - a litany of seven that most school children knew. But now there are too many astronauts to remember and if you ask the man on the street who the crew of the Apollo 13 was, or the crew of Apollo 7, or the crew of Gemini 9, he'll laugh at you and say a) he doesn't know, and b) he doesn't care. SO OUR FACELESS and name- less astronauts entered Rackham Aud. and as the program wore on they began to gain faces and be- gan to assume names. There was David Scott, the most experienced and youngest of the three.. Although 39 his cherubic face made him look 10 years younger and only close up could you see the crowsfeet of a jet pilot around his eyes and the wrinkles that come from e i g h t years of astronaut training. The most conservative dresser of the three, Scott spoke w i t h expertise on the geological samp- les he had collected, pacing the audience with jokes as he proud- ly spoke of Apollo 15's achieve- ments. He had come to the University and lived in East Quad but soon left for the Air Force Academy. "I had the choice of working my way through school here or get- ting a free ride from the A i r Force," he commented - a Michi- gan man for but one year though now eagerly claimed by the pub- obedient, cheerful brave, c 1 e a n and reverent heroes. They aren't. They are among the best t e s t pilots in the world, they are among the hardest working peo- ple you can find, but they are not supermen, they are not heroes. If they were not flying in space they would be flying missions over Vietnam or trying out new ex- perimental aircraft - both at a much higher risk than the rela- tively saferbusiness of space flight where every piece of equipment and procedure has been checked a hundred times. IN TRYING to bill them as heroes, NASA's huge public rela- tions staff and allies such as Life Magazine and Walter Cronkite have done these men a disservice. They have been painted as cele- brities, but they are engineers - test pilots. They can neither speak, joke nor appear in public as confidently or as well as cele- brities and they shouldn't be ex- pected to. And if their dialogues from space are obscure and banal, it is because they are pilots trying to accomplish a complex techni- cal feat and not entertainers for the masses as the television net- works would have us believe. If our astronauts are unnatur- al it is because they have been pushed to be heroes - and that role is difficult to play. A friend of John Glenn's once said some- thing to the effect that "even when John takes, a pee he acts as if every impressionable young person in the country is watch- ing him." DAVE SCOTT, Al Worden and Jim Irwin are human beings, and they are damn good astronauts, But they are not, and never were, heroes and it was the people who expected heroes or celebrities or1 entertainers that were disap- pointed. I -Daily-Jim Judkis licity hounds of a University anx- ious to impress money-laden alumni and the taxpaying public. Jim Irwin had a quietrdignity about him, With his hair slick- ed back and a purple tie on a purple-flowered shirt, his appear- ance belied a seriousness that be- came evident as he spoke. The words came out hesitantly and the jokesche earnestly tried to coax fell flat. Bt at a recep- tion afterwards one could not help but being impressed with his friendliness as he formally shook hands with each of the students surrounding him. BESIDES DIGNITY, the other impression Irwin gave was per- severance. He told of twice ap- plying to the astronaut program and each time being rejected. Fin- ally, in 1966 he made it on the third attempt. The last member of the crew Alfred Worden, was in many ways the most likeable of the t h r e e. Wearing a sharp beige sport coat, he was the most relaxed and out- going of the crew. He talked smoothly of his three days alone in lunar orbit while Scott and Irwin were on the moon getting all the attention. A native of Jackson, Mich., Worden is the Henry Kissinger of the astronaut set. He was divorced; from his wife several years ago and has a penchant for parties and an active social life. At the reception afterwards he didn't mince words either on be- ing an astronaut or his prediction of the score of the Michigan-Navy football game set for the next day. "It won't even be a contest," he explained. "If Michigan doesn't beat them by a hundred points they'll be lucky." OUR THREE ASTRONUATS had developed names and faces and in private they were q u i t e human (the writer was taller than two of them.) Yet through no fault of their : own, their grand return to the University had a thin layer of plastic over it. This artificiality comes from the conscious efforts of the s p a c e agency since the first astronauts were named in 1959 to paint them as trustworthy, loyal, courteous, Letters to The Daily Student vote To The Daily: IN THE MANY articles The Daily has published recently on the "youth vote" or "student vote", there is one very simple- minded point that never seems to get made. Since college students are bona fide individual people, like anybody else, they do not necessarily form any voting bloc at all, even if registered in a col- lege town. Maybe that's why so many choose to identify themselv- es as Independents - might that word not mean exactly what it says? When I was a student ten years ago I disagreed violently with some students, middle-aged men and white-haired women, a n d agreed with some other students, middle-aged men and white-hair- ed women. We never thought we could read minds or values from tangled hair or wrinkled faces. (By the way, a lot of the hair was very long and tangled ten years ago at my college - we were pioneers in that particular unimportant fashion, much to our parents' dis- gust.) The next time anybody tries to convince you that electing younger representatives will guar- antee better treatment of young- er people, you might ask him for a minute about all those old Sena- tors in Washington - and about our country's treatment of the elderly. Maybe breaking people in- to groups according to age, or sex, or color is just a little too simple. I can think of no good reason to require that my representatives come from my group of 31-year- old white housewives. I do require that they have the drive, skill and1 experience to actually effect soml of the changes in the world that I most want to see. MAY THE NEW and the o1d voters watch their steps and judge all politicians by exactly the same standards, regardless of age or political identification. May we all remember that even moral talk is cheap, and raise our eyebrows at the rhetoric while we look at what our would-be leaders can really do. We can all do our own talking. We elect legislators to get good l"gislation through while block- ing bad legislation. We'd better judge our candidates on their abil- ity to do just that. . Leslie Morris Sept. 23 Golf course To The Daily: THE WEEKEND before last. The Daily published a letter of mine deploring, among other things, the Athletic Department's use of the golf course as a park- ing lot. Professor Livesay respond- ed in the same space this past weekend with a letter defending the Department. (Or at least I think it was a defense. His tongue was probably in cheek, but I'm not sure ,which cheek). I would like to comment on his response and to urge others to air their opinions on the general sub- ject of athletics at the University, as I think our policies are badly in need of revision. First, Livesay professes delight at the prospect that some cars might ruin the golf course, and offers the opinion that he would like to go spin wheels there him- self. To each his own, I guess. Second, he equates football watchers and golf players as es- sentially similar fanatics, some- how missing the point that golfers are playing a game, while specta- tors are not. Our recreation ought to .be arranged so that the great- est number can participate, not observe. Third, he is upset by our poor facilities for casual swimming, and expresses the hope that the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics will use the profits from the new parking lot to build a new pool. I wish they would, too - either a new pool, or squash and handball courts, or any of a num- ber of athletic facilities now lack- ing on the central campus. But consider the record-we needed these things last year, too, and look, what we got-a new Sports Services Building for the football team. My guess is that the park- ing profits will not go for any of these generally desirable things, but will be used to pay for lights on the Stadium, bringing more spectators to Ann Arbor and more money to the Department of Ath- letics. -Prof. Steve Easter Dept. of Zoology Sept. 27 *$ JAMES STOREY, Business Manager RICHARD RADCLIFFE......... Advertising SUZANNE BOSCHAN ..... Sales JOHN SOMMERS..................Finance ANDY GOLDING ...............Circulation Manager Manager Manager Director -STEVE KOPPMAN Editorial Page Editor -Daily-Jim Judkis Astronauts on parade A look c FOR BUSY people, convenience food can be a help. Some foods, like frozen orange juice concentrate, are an excellent con- venience at a reasonable cost. But others are not only more expen- sive and often lower in nutrition than home-prepared foods, they may also take more time to pre- pare than a regular meal. So to get the most for y o u r time and money, here are some some tips on choosing con- venience foods. Frozen foods, particularly vege- tables, can be a bargain if you buy private, not national brands. Studies have shown private brands are at least 15 to 20 percent cheaper and are as good as the national labels. Much of the difference is due to heavy advertising of national brands. If the store has its own brand on sale, it's often a top bargain. One and a half of 2- pound bags of vegetables are es- pecially a good buy when on sale, plus offerihg you the convenience of using what your need and re- closing the bag. One of the problems with froz- the crystals on the outside; usually mean the packag been warmed and refrozen Department of Agriculture gests you watch for torn, ed or juice-stained packag Unfortunately, most tl damage can't be found un package is opened. Daman show up in color change, peach slices turning brown ries losing color or green tables losing their bright color. Frozen poultry loses m and darkens. A large amo frost in the package is ofte ther sign of thawing and r ing. Return any frozen foo is damaged. Remember that every exti added to a food disproporti raises the price. Let's say green peas cost 19 cents ounces. If a butter sauce is the price might jump to 33 See if the sauce is worthi plain frozen peas and ad a stick of butter or mar yourself. Breaded foods are anoth pensive convenience. Fried quality and t h e y double the cost of a home-pre- Ste ge has pared meal. Frozen bean a n d Lib . The frank dinners seem inexpensive Oth s u g- at 39 cents for 12 ounces, but they bar crush- often cointain only 1% ounces of fou es. franks. cos .hawing Sidney Margolius, consumer fra til the specialist, found you could make cos ge will as good a dinner, in less time, Bu with by using canned means and add- ou n, her- ing your own franks. The cost is Po vege- around 19 cents for 12 ounces, a fra green savings of 20 cents per person.F But, if you do use frozen, pre- Ar oisture pared dinners, comparison shop. cos unt of In checking beef dinners, , M a r- me n ano- golius found that Sultana, A&P's pla efreez- private brand, not only costs much cen d that less, but yielded more meat and bal solid food and less gravy than the C ra item national brands. the onately If you like pot pies watch the bet frozen prices. Everybody's Money found an for 10 that a Swanson 8-ounce pie costs an added, 27 cents, but the 16-ounce pie and cents. costs 65 cents. There are no sav- bal it. Buy ings with the larger size. Pot pies V d half are usually a bargain only when Ma rgarine they sell for under 25 cents. bea by1 ter ex- CANNED CONVENIENCE foods bea bread- have good and bad points. Can- bea prices ew had 48.5 percent sauce and by's 54.3 percent. her canned foods are less of a rgain. For instance, Margolius and Campbell's Breans & Franks ts 41 cents for 16 ounces. The nks weigh only 3 ounces and st you around $1.49 per pound. t for only 17 cents for 16 aces, you can buy Campbell's rk & Beans and add your own nks. Franco-American and Chef Boy- -Dee spaghetti and meatballs st 39 cents for 15 ounces. The atballs weigh 3 ounces. Since in, canned spaghetti costs 20 its for 16 ounces, those meat- ls run around $1.25 per pound. Considering the protein value of food and the cost, the best is are regular, canned spaghetti " cheese followed by macaroni d cheese, macaroni or spaghetti d beef, and spaghetti and meat- lls. With canned bean products, rgolius says regular pork and ans are the best buy followed barbecue beans, beef and beans, ans and franks, and chili with ans. of food apple drink "not less than 30 per- cent apple juice"; and the orange drink "not less than 10 percent orange juice." Not only are can- ned drinks far below the nutri- tional level of fresh or concen- trated juice, but a 4-ounce serving of. for instance, frozen orange juice costs at least 50 percent less than a 6-ounce serving of orange drink. Or to save even more money and get more nutrition add your own water and sugar to a fresh or reconstituted frozen juice. Other convenience foods a r e equally costly. Shake 'n Bake costs 27 cents for 28 ounces or $1.82 per pound. That's at least four times more than the cost of the food it coats. Cool 'n Creamy as well as the canned pudings are expensive and offer little con- venience when you can make your own pudding for 6 to 8 cents per serving. WHEN BUYING convenience foods, stay with the foods t h a t don't have added seasoning, ap- petizers, special additives or boil- able bags. Rather than precook- ed buy raw frozen fish, meats or ..11t-v ,,i,, 11J l~t in'f T . o..o-n I. IIII