MR Food Day events k By MARY HARRIS NOW THAT THE food problem has become the food crisis, public attention is suddenly focusing on num- erous food-related issues. In the Third World, millions are starving to death. Here at home; food costs have risen so dramatically that many of the poor do not eat properly. And even the affluent are becoming aware that what we eat is as important as how much. In light of these trends, the Student Nutrition Ac- ion Committee (SNAG) announced Tuesday its plans for a three-day symposium on food to be held in March. The event, to be known as Food Day 1975, will cover a wide range of topics, including national, interna- tional and personal aspects of nutrition. PLANS FOR the conference presently include a number of workshops on various issues, as well as guest speakers in the area of nutrition. Some sug- gested areas of attention are food cooperatives, vege- tarianism, ways to obtain food stamps, protein sub- stitutes, and supermarket shopping. The committee hopes that various schools and colleges, as well as community groups and bifsiness groups, will prepare workshops related to their areal of expertise. SNAC members emphasize that this is a community-wide project, and anyone with ideas or resources is encouraged to help. - Plenty of assistance is needed at present to give the project momentum. According to SNAC member Arlene Gorelich, at least $15,000 will be required to fund the project. The group cannot rent auditorium space or book speakers until they have raised the money. They hope to do this by soliciting businesses and founda- tions. THE GROUP hopes that Food Day 1975 will be only the begining of a tnutrition awareness movement. Peggy Ravich, head of S'NAC, puts it this way: "We hope Food Day 1975 will extend outside the Uiniver- sity community and beyond the actual conference. 9rojected We would like to have programs in schools and other community organizations and to follow up the con- ference with concrete actions that we can take to im- prove loca land global food conditions. Food Day on the University campus will be coordin- ated with events in different sections of the country by the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a non-profit consumer group based in Washington. As well as stimulating public interest in nutrition, Food Day is intended to create permanent action groups to deal with local problems. THERE WILL be a planning meeting tonight for Food Day at 8 p.m. in the public health school audi- torium. All interested members of the public are en- couraged to attend. Questions can be a-(wered by Arlene Gorelich, 662-9191 or Steve Gould, 665-7791. Mary Harris is a Daily staff reporter and assistant night editor. Rep. Mills' QrxnDail Eighty-f our years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan UTTERLY TASTELESS condition d By WAYNE JOHNSON WHAT IS WRONG with Representative Wilbur Mills? Suddenly he acts as if he learned his politics from Perry Bullard. As a result, he will be stripped of the enormous power he once en- joyed in near secrecy. Something is responsible for the drastic change in his personality and it is up to responsible journalists like myself, to dredge up the hearsay and innuendo until we accidentally hit the truth or force another public dsiplay. The possibilities are endless, but certain categories can already be eliminated. Syphillis for example, cannot be responsible. Nixon has taught us tha tthe syphilitic brain de- mands rest, not long nights on the town. A sudden loss of impotence, however, might just cause an elderly man to kick up his heels and damn the consequences. We certainly don't hear Mrs. Mills complaining, although her hus- band's public infidelities must give her grief. There must be something about the new Wilbur that she likes. OR IT COULD be drugs causing the strange behavior, but which ones? Mills has been a pow- er addict for so long that thetransition to any- thing else would probably have been a great Y$ shock. Somebody lays a few marijuana ceegars on Wilbur, he smokes one, goes to see a strip act, and gets so deranged during the show that he decides to take the stripper out. Siagnosed Enter Fanne Foxe, bosomy, asinine and ready for publicity. When Wilbur pulls out the other joint, Fane reveals a bong filled with wine. We should be thankful they don't both jump in the Tidal Basin. Some have suggested they recognize the twin- kle of LSD in Wilbur's beady eyes. It's always possible, of course, but I doubt that the symptoms can support that diagnosis. His behavior seems odd only in view of his high office. Any other elderly man would happily ride around with Fanne, even without drugs. If acid had been responsible, we probably would have witnessed the first self-crucifixion of a U.S. Congressman. ONE POPULAR story maintains that one can almost hear the arteries around Wilbur's brain hardening, even over television: He is only 65, which barely qualifies him for Social Security and doesn't necessarily mean he requires in- stitutionalization. Still, Wilbur might be an old 65, meaning he doesn't have too many Halloweens and Christmases to go. This last theory is almost too irresponsible to print, but with Watergate safely under our belts, we can't be too careful. Some claim that Wilbur is dead, but Nixon had him wired for sound an'd action He was voting like he always did when something went wrong. Somebody tried to ernse his tape, no doubt. Wayne Johnson is a writer for The Daily's Editorial Page. Thursday, December 5, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Dehumanization on the line IF HENRY FORD were alive today, he would be hurt. The assembly line that created his first shiny black Ford automobile appears to be mov- ing toward obsolescence, along with so many other processes that are re- garded as characteristic features of American business. The recent auto industry layoffs suggest that the force behind assem- bly line production, the need for hu- man effort to keep turning out cars at speeds inconceivable when Henry's first Ford was born. Technology has ceased to amaze the business world. The average business weekly is outdated by the time it is distributed. In one week, new technological advances are made, which render the publications partially invalid. As the auto layoffs continue, it is interesting to imagine the complex Sports Staff MARC FELDMAN Sports Editor GEORGE HASTINGS Executive Sports Editor ROGER ROSSITER .... Managing Sports Editor JOHN KAHLER.........Associate Sports Editor Photography Staff KAREN KASMAUSKI Chief Photographer KEN FINK Picture Editor STUART HOLLANDER......Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN :............Staff Photographer PAULINE LUBENS ..........Staff Photographer new component that will replace those "old faithfuls," the workers, on the assembly line. Its technological features will have to be explained in highly simplified terms that the layperson can under- stand. The auto companies have yet to unveil even the plans for this new super-machine, but perhaps it will appear something like this: A device will be fixed at a certain point along the assembly line. Out of its main body will protrude long, flexible coils with some kind of gripping tool at the end. It will have a memory box, like a tape recorder, that will continually feed the machine its instructions. It will be... Funny, these mechanisms sound an awful lot like human beings. But al- though human labor seems cheaper than all those blueprints and com- plex pieces of machinery, the auto- makers seem to have labeled the hu- man component obsolete. The proof is already before us - thousands of these components have been layed off and sent away to the old "glue factory," so to speak, of state welfare benefits. -BRAD WILSON TODAY'S STAFF: News: Glen Allerhand, Ken Fink, Cindy Hill, Cheryl Pilate, Sara Rim- er, Tim Schick, Becky Warner. Editorial Page: Steve Ross, Becky Warner. Arts Page: David Blomquist, C h r i s Kochmanski Photo Technician: Scott Benedict, Letters to Th 7r l -- ' I inetaphysics To The Daily: RE: CLARK Cogsdill's com- ment (Daily, Nov. 22) 'Levi Jackson would never have made his 88 yard run if OSU lineback- er Bruce Elia hadn't turned the wrong way.' How astute. And might I add: So much of history would have been altered, had things been done differently. -Tony Schwartz November 22 iuclear fission To The Daily: THIS IS AN. open letter to Karen A. Bantel. We too share your concerns and would like to help you go beyond the in- formation made available to you. You say that "the little information readily available pertaining to the hazards of nu- clear fission are often vague and misleading." We think we can give you other sources of information and clear up some of the ques- tions you have. We have not yet received a copy of the Nor- thern Michigan Medical Society report, but if you would show us your copy, we would be glad to go through it point by point. From the comments you have made, we question the accur- acy and credibility of the re- port, for the following reasons: (1) The comments on the ef- fects of radioactivity are too vague. Have you written to the Division of Radiological Health in Lansing asking whether or not it has received a copy of the report? If so, ask them for an evaluation. (2) By using the word "Hiroshima bomb" the re- port is contradicting the very point it is trying to make. We presume that the report is con- cerned about the effects of lin- gering radioactivity produced in N-plants. It happens, however, that no effect due to the linger- ing radioactivity has been found in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The statement then would imply that we need not fear the effects of fission product radioactivity. We mention this to point out the illogic of making references to atomic bombs. Furthermore, the comment on a spoonful of Pu-239 is misleading. In fact, if this amount were fed to 200,- 000 people, the plutonium in the body would be substantially be- low the maximum permissible body burden. The reason for this is that the body tends to re- ject plutonium. (3) The state- ment about radioactive waste is ambiguous. Please show us the report and then we will be able to point out the mistakes. AS FOR HOUSE Bill No. 6126, we suggest that you read it very carefully. If you do not have a copy, we would be glad to send you one. We have read it, stu- died it, and are against it. Because of your expressed interest in getting at the facts of nuclear power, we invite you and your friends to come over some afternoon. We will be hap- py to show you around the nu- clear reactor on the North Cam- pus and discuss the problems and questions you have over a cup of coffee. Call us to make arrangements. One of us (C.K.) can be reached at 764-4260. -Chihiro Kikuchi, Dept. of Nuclear .Eng. harassment To The Daily: THERE HAS been an upsurge of interest lately in the govern- ment's denial of the political rights of dissenters: from the front pages of the New York Times to the Michigan Daily; from the evening news to the Pilot Program's speaker on po- litical assassinations (Thurs. Nov. 21). There has been an outcry against the FBI's plan to "dis- rupt and distract" anyone who disagrees with government poli- cies. The FBI's Counterintelli- gence Programs (Cointelpro) are aimed against the Black Panther Party, other black groups, the Socialist Workers Party, new left groups, and many others: everyone, by the FBI's own admission, but local PTA groups. According to all the recent news releases, these activities were supposed to have ceased in 1971. But consider the fol- lowing. I N A U G U S T, 1 9 7 4, the FBI announced that it plan- ned to monitor the upcoming an- nual convention of the Young Socialist Alliance. On Oct. 29, 1974, the YSA and Socialist Workers Party filed a motion in federal court for a prelimin- ary injunction to stop the FBI surveillance of the convention to be held in St. Louis, Mis- souri, in December. The social- ists claims that the planned surveillance violates their First Amendment rights of free speech and association. In a statement released October 29, Delphine Welch, YSA National Organization Secretary said, "By conducting surveillance of our convention, the FBI hopes to stigmatize the YSA, closing ears and minds to our socialist ideas. A cloud of suspicion is cast over our completely legal convention proceedings and oth- er political activities. "IN REALITY, the YSA is nIn Pntiroll,1.~nf'nlnrnni'ntifn not in the FBI "subversive" files . . . Who committed mass murder in Vietnam, broke into the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist, and illegally fi- nanced efforts to topple the elected government of Chile?" Attorney Leonard Boudin ex- plained at a news conference that the motion for the injunc- tion is "part of a civil suit to win a permanent injunction against the government's uncon- stitutional harassment of politi- cal opponents. That suit was filed on behalf of the SWP and YSA in July, 1973." ATTORNEYS for the SWP and YSA maintained that FBI surveillance would"have "an in- hibiting effect" on attendance at the convention. Their court brief argues that conventioneers "would be sitting ducks for gov- ernment name - takers and pho- tographers." To buttress their contentions, the socialists produced copies of Civil Service Commission re- ports on five former govern- ment employes who were threatened with dismissal from their jobs because of their at- tendance at YSA conventions and SWP campaign rallies. Persons and organizations who agree that the YSA should be able to hold its convention free of FBI harassment should send messages of support to the local YSA office: 4103 Michi- gan Union, University of Michi- gan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. IN ADDITION, the attorney general's list of so-called sub- versive organizations, suppos- edly abolished last June by the Nixon administration remains in operation today under the Ford administration. Continuing use of the list was made public on Nov. 7 when Steven Wattenmaker, a leader of the YSA, released the text of a letter he received from the U. S. Army Reserve. Citing the list, the Army threatened to discharge Wattenmaker on the grounds that his retention in the service "would not be clearly consistent with the interests of national security." The 27-year-old list was pro- claimed abolished on June 4, 1974 by then-President Nixon. In an Executive Order he de- clared that it "is hereby abol- ished and shall not be used for any purpose." A Justice Depart- L etters to The W1)-' +^ I ment spokesman explained at the time that "government ag- encies will not be permitted to refer to the Subversive List." IN 'THE LETTER dated Oct. 18, 1974 and received by Wat- tenmaker on Nov. 1, the Army. explained its action against him on the grounds that "the YSA is controlled and dominated by the Socialist Workers Party, which has been designated as a sub- versive organization by the At- torney General of the United States." Under normal Army proce- dure, Wattenmaker would be discharged in April, 1977. Edith Tiger, director of the National Emergency Civil Lib- erties Committee, announced that her group will challenge on Wattenmaker's behalf "the con- tinuing use of this unconstitu- tional 'enemies list."' NECLC attorney David Kairys, who successfully defended the Cam- den 28, will represent Watten- maker. In a first move, Watten- maker requested that the Army convene a "Field Board of In- quiry" to consider his chal- lenge. DURING HIS two years of ac- tive duty from 1971 to 1973 in San Antonio, Texas, Wattenmak- er was active in opposing the Vietnam War and presenting a socialist viewpoint to this fel- low GIs. He ran for Congress from San Antonio in 1972. The Army's letter charged t h a t Wattenmaker "exhibited evidence of your specific intent to further the unlawful goals" of the YSA. Wattenmaker, a na- tional committee member of the YSA, called the Army's charges "totally untrue." He said that the "Army knows full well that both the YSA and SWP are completely lawful organizations. The gov- ernment is the lawbreaker. "They used that unconstitu- tional attorney general's list for 27 years, supposedly abolished it, and now in blatant violation of their own rules they continue to use it against lawful politi- cal activity," he concluded. IN LIGHT of these cases of continuing government harass- ment, support to such civil liber- ties suits as that filed in July 1973 by Leonard 'Boudin on be- half of the YSA and SWP be- comes increasingly important. Financed and publicized by the Political Rights Defense Fund, that suit seeks a perma- nent injunction against such 1lfnt4-arnta - c.t,,I hnrnoor nn+ ac IC(6 ARE TfHE AH6E(CNk p~e&c -0 5#OP l3u, wX3. 651.41&Ik)ETP FACTVAL , ,. ___...,, W ---.._. .--- N BUT IM THt HMTRCTCUAST wA AE5 TH65U RUHORS AREU QkIPU. ---- ---.. RUHORS . EV AK)P pr'Etvg cz~ ~ u'r 86r 'LU5G M&oT' 17t )-- 15o *W:: Z\DO R'OCEFC tWR ASV~i2 VC 2PO Y i i