Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April 11, 1971 The (food) poisoning of America Continued from Page 5 there are harmful substances in foods. So why add more of them?" Jean Mayer suggests we start eli- minating the additives which indus- try puts in the food purely for (dubi- ous) aesthetic value. Start with arti- ficial colors: "They're a marketing tool," admits Trauberman. Without artificial food coloring, orange peels may sometimes look greenish, tomato sauces won't always look vine-ripened red, noodles will be white and, if we eliminate color fixatives like sodium nitrite and nitrate, hot dogs and sa- lamis will be brown instead of "the pinkish color associated with these produces" according to the NAS. Get rid 'of sequestrants like calcium diso- dium EDTA (which inhibits human blood coagulants) and canned kidney bean juice may turn cloudy instead of clear, and each bean won't stay the same color. Consumers could adjust also to less artificial flavoring if they knew the food's taste, instead of stay- ing more or less constant, "will vary as natural foods might," says Mauri- atti at AD Little. Even the preservatives can go. They do prolong food freshness, but who wants bread in their bin for three weeks when mass production proces- sing has leached out 11 of its 15 nat- ural nutrients? Eliminating preserva- tives from bread means simply that manufacturers would have to deliver more often to groceries; and, Trau- berman warns "the consumer would unavoidably be faced with higher costs because there would be a high- er grocery spoilage rate. Let's face it: the consumer must pay for the food she buys and the food that sits on the shelf, too." Bleached soggy American preserved bread runs a 10-15 percent spoilage rate even now-which sug- gests bread manufacturers are caus- ing their own problems by producing too much surplus. When you put the squeeze on the industries, even they admit that most synthetic additives aren't really ne- cessary in terms of food production. "There aren't very many additives that could not be eliminated without the food industry failing apart," Trauberman says. "The food compan- [es would still be in business. The consumer would have less variety of foods; she'll (the American house- wife again!) eat the same amount of foods even if there are no additives. The consumer may just have to change her eating habits." But there are two reasons why food corporations will never cut additives: profits and market control. Once you understand what the food business is all about, you can't escape the con- clusion that merely eating too keep yourself alive involves political deci- sions every time you shop. But you don't have to care much about poli- tics to know that the food you buy from the corporate monopolies ma=, be poisoning you while maximizing their profits. You can start battling the corpora- tions on your own. You can't avoid all additives and pollutants, and don't necessarily need to, but you can avoid the worst: - Don't eat foods with artificial colors ("I would certainly stay away from synthetic c o 1 o r s," Lederberg says). - Don't eat bakery products, es- pecially bread, made with bleached flour. Go to a good local bakery or make your own. - Avoid dehydrated and other "convenience" foods like boxed mash- ed potatoes, dry packaged soups and -"imitation" beef stroganoff. The closest you'll come to real food is some vegetable and beef powder. The rest is synthetic. -Don't eat packaged snacks or breakfast cereals. - Don't eat imitation foods-from imitation orange juice to non-dairy creamers, to soy protein products. Soy feeds are a tricky area. It's true, as General Foods and Worthington, the two biggest producers, point out, that soy products contain as much protein as real meat. But that's only part of the story. To taste like meat (or vegetables) the soy isolates must be smothered and pumped with every synthetic additive known. And furth- ermore, Dr. Mayer warns, "when we replace natural foods with synthetic protein substitutes, we lose many trace minerals and vitamins. We don't know everything about this area, so we're in a transition period that has serious dangers." Eaters will have to make certain sacrifices, such as eating real meats and poultry and more fresh fruits and vegetables (if cost is a problem cut up the meat small; the portions you get in a dehydrated package aren't e x a c t 1 y enormous either), which means making dinner will take 30 minutes instead of 15. It's worth it. Look at the facts. The food industry insists that our food supply has never been better: "In some areas of the world, 40 percent of the children die before they are big enough to steal food from the table," a General Foods vice president moans. But in their hearts, Americans know something is wrong here. Our infant mortality rate is fifth in the world; adult heart attacks and cancer are soaring. "Americans spend six times as much on health as they did thirty years ago and with no statistics to show for it," Mayer points out. "The average American spends much more on health than people in any other country in the world, and we're way down on the scale in health." The life expectancy of the average American male is 68-69; the average woman, 72. Add six years to that and you're in Sweden. They have less additives in their food than we do, and they're probably living longer for it. Post mortem When Norman Mailer ran for may- or of New York, he rejected a pro- posal to save water by filling toilet bowls with chemicals because, he said, Americans are becoming alien- ated from their bodies and from the earth. "We should at least smell our own shit," he said. But even the waste we excrete isn't real anymore. It's all laboratory made. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This article will ap- pear in the June issue of Ramparts maga- zine. n 1971 Ramparts.) We're in debt to wars, floods, health e0 servKics 1 fe saving9 and od banks. hel us - help emAe=RdO OtaY 4 'V. 'I ,I9 iff GET YOUR MAX WITH A Want Ad : . I ----, i i a 07, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN masesassmsasausmiemmss enumasummeamaasasteam.* .=..*.*.J. . UNIVERSITY TOWR Summer and Fall leases now available AIR CONDITIONING--SWIMMING POOL single liability 5 minutes to class 24-hour maintenance . LTIME TO I1 The Daily Official Bulletin is an officialpublication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 ZS.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Day Calendar SUNDAY, APRIL 11 School of Music: Mu Phi Epsilon Mu- sicale, Sch. of Music Recital Hail, 4:30 p.m. MONDAY, APRIL 12 Museum of Anthropology: R. Mil- Ion, U. of Rochester, "City Life in An- cientTeotihuacan Mexico," Rackham Amph., 4 p.m. Physics Seminar: W. Willis. YaleS Univ., "Strange Particle Leptonic De- cays," P&A Colloquium Rm, 4 p.m. English Dept. and Extension Serv- ices: D. Hall, poetry reading, Multipur- pose Rm, UGLI, 4:10 p.m. Computing Center: Special public meeting to respond to questions about the move the new new bldg., Nat. Sci. Aud., 8 p.m. Musical Society: M. Cunningham & Dance Co., lecture-demonstration, Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. General Notices Attention all men interested in be- coming Cheerleaders for coming foot- ball season: will be series of cheerlead- ing practice sessions from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Wrestling Rm, Intramural Bldg., Mon., Apr. 12 - Thurs., Apr. 15. Placement SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICES 212 S.A.B. For more info, about the following,j call Mrs. Cooper, 764-7460. T.V.A. ,Knoxville, opening for biolo- gical aide. Must have knowledge of forest botany and freshwater aquatic biology. Further details at SPS. Capitol Consultants, Lansing, opening for eng. aide. Field of study civil or arch. eng. American Inan Found., Grosee Ile, Director needed with ability in leader- ship to supervise building and main- tenance of housing. Work and direct young people. Students needed for environmental research with animals in one of the Rocky Mountain States. Vet, student (or zoology, physiology or anatomy) and animal necropsy or pathology exper. Univ. of N.Y., Albany. Openings for sci. res. aide. Resident of Albany or Saratoga Spring area preferred. Further details available. National Inns, Ltd., N.J., openings for room stewardesses and ingmt. trainees on the N.J. Boardwalk. wi. New Factory CELEBRATION 20% off on all JENSEN Speakers ICII rSTL I10 121 W. 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