m I she Mt ian ma'in Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Saturday, November 9, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Food: A rare commodity ARE YOU EATING less now? If so, get used to it. If not, start, it's the trend of the future. The world's leaders have realized that if no action is taken worldwide famine could result. A half decade ago, alarmists predicted a famine in underdeveloped nations by 1975. Considering the situation in Africa, Bangeladesh and India, it seems to have already started. American food surpluses have decreased in the past few years supposedly due to bad weather. Because of growing concern, due to either humanitarian considerations or fear of revolution, world leaders are meeting at a World Food Con- ference. Whether the Conference makes a positive effort toward international cooperation in solving the problem or turns starvation into a political football remains to be seen. Different countries have different ideas and a clash has already developed between Henry Kissinger and Agriculture Secretary, Earl Butz. NOT ONLY GOVERNMENTAL, but citizen cooperation will be neces- sary. On Meet the Press two weeks ago, a Harvard Professor proposed the idea that Americans should eat less, and send the surplus to starving na- tions. He stated that many Ameri- cans, especially young people have been very receptive to the idea. The U.S. is a gross overconsumer of the world's resources. While people are starving in Africa, farmers are de- stroying calves because raising them has become unprofitable. The Food Conference could be a step in the right direction toward worldwide cooperation in solving the problem of hunger. One can only hope it will be a first step and not just a one shot political effort. -STEVE ROSS Black By ANDREW ROSS CAN THE Black Panther Par- ty survive the apparent loss of its two co-founders, H u e y Newton and Bobby Seale? t Some long-time friends of thei Panthers feel the party - whichI since its birth in 1966 has sur- vived exhausting police harass-~ ment, government plots, and internal ideological splits - hast now come to the end of its road.- But Elaine Brown, Acting Headt of the party and candidate int 1975 for Oakland c i t y council,t expresses confidence in t h e party's future. . Acknowledging changes since the Panthers' former gun-toting days, Browns says, "We aret still a revolutionary vanguard party. But our strategy has got- ten better. And if it doesn't ' work, we'll change it again." Labelled "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country" by late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover in 1970, the Panthers had long been the tar- get of a federal and local law enforcement campaign compar- able to past drivestagainst the Communist Party, the CIO and the Wobblies (IWW). "THE PANTHERS are a bunch of hoodlums. We've got to get rid of them," declared as- sistant U.S. Attorney General TerrisLeonardbin1969, shortly after naming Bobby Seale as a co-defendant in the Chicago 8 conspiracy case stemming from the demonstrations at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chi- cago. The same year, hundreds of1 r Panthers were arrested on the street or in a series of police raids on party offices across the country. The vast majority of' those arrested were later re- leased for "lack of evidence." Dozens died, some in shootouts- others murdered, Panthers say, by police agents. Newton himself, in court over a dozen times in the past six1 years, spent two years, and Seale spent many months, be-i t hind bars on murder charges of which they were eventually ac- quitted, Newton after t h r e e trials. Former Panther Minister of Information Eldridge Cleaver, author of "Soul on Ice," w a s charged with attempted murder after a 1968 "shootout" (in which Panther Bobby Hutton was killed, apparently a f t e r having surrendered to police). Cleaver fled the country to avoid being returned to prison as a parole violator. 9 ine Panthers: what THE RECENTLY published "Cointelpro" documents, a ser- ies of FBI memos suggesting a wide range of disruptive and of- ten illegal activity against rad- ical groups, revealed special plans for the Panthers. For example, one memo dated May 1970 suggested a plan to be carried out "in close coordina- tion on a high level with t n e Oakland or San Francisco police department," which involved the mailing of fabricated documents to party leaders. The documents would "pin- point Panthers as police or FBI informants," ridicule or dis- credit Panther leaders "through their ineptness or personal es- capades . . . (promote) f a c- tionalism among BPP members ...(reveal) misuse or mis- appropriation of Panther funds." Such a plan, concluded t h e Bureau, "has excellent 1o n g- range potential to disrupt and curtail Panther activities." A MAJOR party split, in 1971, left Cleaver in Algeria calling for armed struggle a n d New- ton in Oakland advocating a new, quieter program of com- munity organizing. Following the split, and accusations of murder and other crimes b e - tween the two factions, a num- ber of Panthers abandoned the party for the underground Black Liberation Army. The Oakland-based party has so far managed to survive as a viable political force, settingsun a variety of community service programs - notably a school - and piling un a sizeable vote in the 1973 Oakland city elections. Now for the first time, a number of "Panther watchers," many of them sympathetic to the party, seriously question whether it can survive. At the moment, the Panthers face a thorough Internal Re- venue Service (IRS) investiga- tion of their finances. Whether errors of judgment by the par- ty's money handlers are solely resnonsihle, or whether the in- ves:tigation is nolitically-moti- vrated - like similar IRS in- vestigations of "White House enemies" durine the Watergate years - it is likely to end up costing the Panthers money. MEANWHILE, Huey Newton has disappeared after failing to show up for a court hearing on August 28 on three separate as- sailt charges which the Pan- thers insist are merely the lat- est in the series of attempted frame-ups. A number of observers, not all confined to the ranks of law enforcement, believe that at least one charge will stick, and that Newton may face a second degree murder charge if the victim in one alleged assault - now in a coma - dies. The Panthers say the pressure on Newton never let up, that he had been shot at, that cars have tried to run him over, and that his apartment had been broken into. New FBI memos uncoyered by Panther lawyer Charles Gar- ry in a pending Panther-related case on the East -Coast reveal that the Bureau was saying on Newton from the next door anartment in 1971. Ex-Oakland Police chief Charles fain con.- firmed the existence last Sen- tember of a $10,000 underworld "contract" on Newton's life. BOBBY SEALE left Oakland before Newton disappeared. Elaine Brown, who is now act- ing head of the party, claims Seale is merelv recunerating in Los Angeles from an unspeci- fied illness, buthother soiirces close to the Panthers believe he is -one for good. They give conflicting exPlana- tions, but all agree Seale was inreasingly at odds with New- ton. The loss of their two most prominent leaders is a serious blow to the Panthers. Desnite the existence of a policy-makerg "central committee," Newton was the chief theoretician and strateeist in the party, and Seale is des~ribed by more than one sympathetic observer as the "glue" that held the party to- geth er. ALREADY IN serious finan- cial trolible, the party now has to cover thet 42,000 bail bond Newton jumned. Newton's re- pented brushes with the law, sin'e his release from prison, had already cost the Panth'irs r'ynv former donors, and the IRS investigation can only fr'*'en off new ones. Withnont substantial donatixis from outsiders, many of the i-rtv's programs cannot c n- -in"e: the free breakfast nro- gram is no longer operating', v-1 others have been cut back. Elaine Brown admits that lack of monev now Prevents the Pin- thers from running a daute of candidates in next year's city council elections, although she 'iereelf will run. The party still puts out its weekly newspaper and runs a next? Hunters violate your rights FOR THE NEXT seven months, no one will be safe on any state land in Michigan. Nor will safety be found on much of the private land. What prompts this scary statement? From September to March, hunting season is on. Michigan is the second largest hunting state, running a close second to Pennsylvania. According to the state Department of Natural Resources, 21 people died in hunting accidents in 1972 and 179 were injured. Hunting seasons range from small game to deer hunting, but what they really mean is that for better than half of the year, hun- dreds of hunters will be out with their guns, shooting at anything that moves. It is bad enough that they are out there shooting anything, but they often shoot each other. For those of us who do not hunt, it is still dan- gerous to take a walk through the woods on a fall afternoon. Hunters have been known to shoot peonle, cows, game, signs, dogs, and occa- sionally, themselves. PECAUSE HUNTERS and a r m s manufacturers have almost to- tal control of the Department of Na- tural Resources, they have had their own way for a long time. Hunters represent a very small minority, but TODAY'S STAFF: News: Ken Fink, Cindy Hill, Mary Kelleher, Sara Rimer, Tim Schick, Thom Simonian, Becky Warner Editorial Page: Pete Blaisdell, S t e v e Stojic, Sue Wilhelm' Arts: Ken Fink Photo Technician: Pauline Lubens when hunting season starts, the ma- jority has to put up with people armed to the teeth, running around in the woods fouling the air and land with gun smoke, candybar wrap- pers, used shells, and lead. There are few sights more disgust- ing than a young doe shot in the lungs, gasping for breath, writhing in pain, and bleeding to death on the snow. And there is always the chance that one of these clowns will mistake you for an animal in the underbrush and shoot you. It is time to stop this yearly orgy of blood. Hunters will tell you that they contribute more money to con- servation than any other group. It is not conservation they support, but wildlife "management." This entails a brief respite for the animals from April to August, so that they can re- produce, and thus a new "harvest" can be taken the next year. Because of this type of "conservation" there are no more wolves or other large predators in Michigan, and we have a serious overpopulation of deer. sickle cell anemia screening program. Its Community Learn- ing Center building in Oak- land, which cost $225,000, w a s paid for in cash, and the Inter- communal Youth Institute (its school) now provides free ed- ucation for 92 youngsters fr)m two-and-a-half to 11. WHILE THE major thruast cf the Panthers' activities t hnr s e days is community involvement, the party's promising showing in the 1973 Oakland election h a s led many observers to judge its strength chiefly in terms of electoral politics. In that election, Bobby Sec defeated all the Democrats in the Mayoral primary and wvent on to poll 36 per cent of the vote against incumbent Mayor John Reading, with majorities in most black and some white pre- cincts - in a city whose b'ack po;olation is 40 per cent and growing. spring's coincil race remain in doubt. WHATEVER THE Panther's electoral chances, their split with the white "revolutionary" left is complete. In fact, party members speak with some scorn these days of "infantile guer- illas" and view their "eff the pig" days as mistaken and ar- rogant. But Elaine Brown still con- saders herself a revolutionary, and still looks to the overthrow of the present system. "These twists and turns in the road are not going to stay us from our duty and our task," she says. "I have no intention of giving up the ghost because I don't feel I'm on the brinik of death." . Aildreu Ross is the West Coast correspondent for the Manchester Guardian and a San Francisco Bay Area radio re- porter. Copyright Pacific News Service. But the party did up its 1973 showing kind of registration Brown's prospects not follow with any drive, so in next up, sign up for Lines 101 IF YOU ARE NOT concerned about the rights of animals, you should certainly be concerned about in- fringements of your rights. It is your right to spend time on the public land and state parks without having to worry about getting shot by some kill-crazed hunter, out looking for a; tronhv.I If you have children, you run the risk that they may witness the slaughter of some animal, or worse, be shot themselves. It is your right to try to stop this sort of thing. Write to your state representative demand- ing that the public lands of Michigan be made safe for animals and people. -DAVID WARREN By CHRISTINE YALDA The University's Literary college an- nounced yesterday the formation of a new social science program - the De- partment of Lines. The new program has already re- ceived a vote of support from Student GovernmentCouncil. Said one member, "Hell, we spend so much time waiting in lines around here we may as well get credit for it." The department ex- pects to begin functioning in winter 1975 and the following courses will be offered: Lines 101: Introduction to Lines Aimed primarily at non-concentrators, this course aims to provide the layper- son with a basic understanding of the complexities of waiting in lines. The student will be in a learning-by-doing situation with much emphasis placed on class participation. In order to expose students fully to the varied facets of waiting in line, the course has been divided into three ma- jor sections: Just Standing Around, Non- Pedestrian Problems, and Making the Best of Boredom. IT IS RECOMMENDED that the stu- dent spend three hours a week in field work. Several field trips have been scheduled, including a trip to the Ann Arbor Bank on payday, a study of the Meijer's express aisle, and a Thursday night outing to the V. Bell. Also, as a supplement two excellent films have main emphasis of the course, however, is on imagination and variety as a means to relieve discomfort. Among the topics discussed as mind distracters are whistling, people-watching, foot-shuf- fling, crack or tile counting, and spon- 'Lines 316 is aimed primarily at those who wait on foot. It touches briefly on possible comfortable conditions. The main emphasis of the course, however, is on imag- ination and variety as a means to relieve discomfort. Among the topics discussed as mind distractors are whist- ling, people-watching, foot-shuffling, crack or tile count- ing, and spontaneous shouting.' mas .r:amm ssa i:si::K:'? ist a " ".Lmasa asuliisia masasiin '.assmsaseLi~S-'ritliiss Primarily intended for concentrators, 460 provides a look at linear communi- cation, especially the perpetuation of rumors. Some time will also be spent on the psychological problems of lines but students interested in this field should elect Lines 562: Linear Stress and Resultant Deviancy. Lines 520: Seminar May be elected for as many as three consecutive trimesters. Work is done in- dividually, with the aid of a faculty sponsor. Students may elect their topic from at least one area listed below: Social Lines - Gas Stations, Banks, Churches, Theaters, Customs, Grocery Stores University Lines - Registration Drop- Add, Dorm Cafeterias, LSA, Counseling, I ibrary Reserve Desks, Health Service, Tuition Payment. Anti-social Lines - Pickets, Marches Credit will be granted according to the intensity and acceptability of written materials. Christine Yalda is a junior in the School of Education working on her secondary teaching certificate in social s/tudies. Kt -.__.. A, been ordered - "Registration Day" and "Football Tickets Are Worth the Wait." (This class is not to be confused with Lines 213, Elementary Line Waiting. Lines 213 is open to concentrators only.) Lines 316: Creative Queueing This class is aimed primarily at those who wait on foot. It touches briefly on possible comfortable conditions. The taneous shouting ("head 'em up and move 'em out"). Lines 320: Lining in Leisure As implied by the course title, this class deals with more leisurely waits. Special emphasis is placed on vehicle waiting - in cars, buses, and planes. Lines 460: Problems of Linear Communication I Letters to The Daily SIndia India in your news papers. What all they report is poverty in To The Daily: India. They always paint a very I WOULD appreciate it very sordid and grim picture about much if you could let me ex- India. You Americans associate press my righteous indignation only two things with India - over the most outrageous and poverty and Yoga. Now you humiliating Editorial you had know one more thing about In- on India's nuclear explosion - dia - a poor country having "India feeds egos, not people" nuclear power is a dangerous in the Michigan Daily dated threat to the world's peace. 22nd Oct. '74. What a lopsided and unfair 2 an Indin.Ik74opinion you have about India! As an Indian, I know mre I =feel sorry for the American about the sentiments of my peo- who wants to see only the ugly ple, the economic and the finan- side of life and who wants to cial conditions under which they talk only about the poverty in live and the principles for which India. Within a short span of the country is striving for at time after her independence, home and abroad. I would hke the country has made tremend- to ask Mr. Steve Stojic a few ons progress. What do you know questions. What does he 'now about her welfare programs? at all about India? What right I wonder how many students does he have to criticise India here read the Indian news r;an- pects underdeveloped countries to remain under developed all the time. Your reluctance to compliment a small nation for its scientific achievement is simply deplorable. EACH NATION, big or small has the right to decide what is good or bad for her. She does not dance to martial music as Mr. Stojic assumes. Never was the country a war monger and never will she be. No time in the history of India an Tn.iian w a s forced to fight for a war whi..h he did not believe in. Mr. Stojic is thoroughly mistaken in as- suming that my country is jeal- ons of the U.S. nuclear power. She always applauded on Amsr- ica's scientific achievemeivs. I would like to tell Mr. Sto- technologically developed coun- try could do. It is unfair to chastise her for her sci-ntific achievement. If she misuses it, spends all her resources in pro- ducing nuclear weapons only and uses them against her neigh- boring countries you can -then criticise her to your heart's content. We don't have to be influnced by the whims and fancies of Pakistan. It is for her to decide what is best for her. If Fhe wants to eat weeds let her do so. India will not succumb t- the harsh and unjust criticisms of the big nations. -T. M. Lakshmi October 23 art To The Daily: THE LSA Student Govern- ment's desire to have the Mar- shall Fredericks plaques r e- moved from the LSA building is not legitimate if the reasons they wish to do so are those stated in Thursday's Daily. No art work or work that is valued for ,aesthetic reasons should be removed from view or destroyed for anything but aesthetic tea- sors. There is no reason to make an ugly building even uglier. -Samuel Ferraro November 7 Co~ntaict your rerns-- a