*~~ t4e£i$;n ti~ Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Thursday, February 27, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Sponsor more jazz shows Dailj By MICHAEL SHAPIRO PROM MARCH 10 through March 15 the University will host the first in a series of nationwide events hoping to make people aware of the poli- tics of the food they eat and the world food situation. The organizers of the event h a v e declared April 17 "Food Day." This article discusses one of the issues that will be raised during food week. "We consider the safety of our product the only thing more important than its nutritional value. I think the food industry has been very responsive to people's desires for better nu- trition," a spokesperson from a large breakfast cereal company said. But Michael Jacobson, the originator of "National Food Day," said the cereal industry's product represents some of the worst features of American food. "Americans are eating them- selves intoillness and death," Jacobson said, "The foods we bread can FOR THE PAST FEW years UAC Daystar has promoted jazz con- certs on campus at the rate of about one annually, taking financial losses on them consistently, but continuing to present them for the benefit of what has been a small local jazz au- dience. Herbie Hancock's concert last weekend, however, represented a de- . parture from the pattern -- his was the first jazz show Daystar has put on in three years which didn't lose money. "If jazz can support itself," says TODAY'S STAFF: News: Barb Cornell, Trudy Gayer, Stephen Hersh, Lois Josimovitch, Steve Kagan, Cheryl Pilate, Sara Rimer, Jim Tobin Editorial- Page: Clifford Brown, P a u I Haskins, Debra Hurwitz, W a y n e Johnson, Karen O'Connell, Greg Rest, Steve Ross Arts Page: Chris Kochmanski Photo Technician: Karen Kosmauski Daystar promoter Sue Young, "we can do a jazz act every month. And people do seem to be catching on to it more here in town." More frequent jazz concerts would be a welcome addition to Ann Ar- bor's cultural menu. So it would be good news should UAC's plans come through to follow the Hancock con- cert with an unprecedented second jazz show in a single semester. A ND IT WOULD BE good news should the group succeed in its plans to find a permanent small con- cert facility at which to hold con- certs featuring less popular jazz mu- sicians on a regular basis. There's a lot of good jazz music going around that many people in town would like to have the oppor- tunity to hear performed live, and there are a lot of people who could discover the jazz medium given the opportunity to attend jazz concerts. That music should be performed in Ann Arbor more often. fill or kill eat contribute to a number of diseases including heart disease, bowel cancer, and diabetes." Jacobson is the co-director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, the organiza- tion sponsoring "Food Day" ec- tivities. He said Americans are encouraged to eat food which is bad for them. "VENDING machines are 85 per cent junk food," Jacobson said. "There is no vitamin A or C in fast food restaurants. Why can't Americans get a good nutritious fast meal?" Jacobson maintained that we are trainedrfrom childhood to be consumers of "junk food". "Many baby foods are simply junk," he said. "They are most- ly starch and water. And look at the children's shows on tele- vision. They advertise nothing but candy or breakfast cereals that contain nothing but overly refined grains and refined sug- ar. The cereals are worse be- cause they pretend to be nutri- tious," Jacobson added. I Help! Could coffee take OPEC's lead? 1 ,p , ,ir, _ . . By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - Representatives of 42 coffee-producing countries recent met in El Salvador to . . . well, see if you can guess what they did. Did you guess they discussed ways of cutting production costs so they could reduce prices and make it possible for people in consuming countries to get a 10-cent cup of coffee for less than 25 cents? Wrong again! But if you guessed they discussed forming a cartel to hold coffee off the world market and force up prices, you are definite- ly on the right track. Surprise, surprise! It is not that I mind so much the prospect of paying more for coffee. At this point in the inflationary spiral I no longer even blink at outrageous prices. What I dread is a coffee cutoff similar to last year's oil embargo. For if that happens, we shall again be saturated with helpful hints form consumer experts, this time with regards to con- serving coffee and getting more cups per can. HERE ARE a few of the things we expect: -Nineteen senators will introduce bills to impose a 5 per cent excise tax on expresso machines that brew rich, strong blends and therefore have poor cuppage records. -When the retail price reaches $2 a pound, President Ford will impose a $1-a-pound fee on imported coffee to discourage con- sumption and reduce America's trade deficit. -The government will require percolator manufacturers to in- still filters that recycle used grounds and increase cuppage. The filters add $170 to the retail price of coffee pots. --The Agriculture Department will institute a program to make America self-sufficient in coffee by 1985. The project entails building a greenhouse over the southern half of the United States to create a tropical climate. -The national science foundation will award $50 million in re- search grants to stimulate development of coffee substitutes. This produces an experimental coffee pot that operates on soy beans. It is not yet commercially feasible. -THE PRESIDENT, ruling out coffee rationing for the 27th time in five days, will urge workers to conserve supplies by voluntarily giving up coffee breaks. -Consumer adviser Esther Peterson will advise that individuals can cut their coffee intake up to 25 per cent if they drink it while standing on their heads. -Congressional leaders will react to the coffee crisis by an- nouncing plans to cut income taxes. Dick West is a columnist for United Press International. Gary Costeley, a nutritionist for Kellogg's cereals, said his company takes nutrition v c r y seriously. "Just look at the side of a cereal box; it contains eight vitamins along with pro- tein. When eaten with milz, as they usually are, you've got a nutritional package that's hard to beat. My own children e a t these cereals. I don't care who I work for. I wouldn't feed any- thing I thought was harmful to my kids," Costeley claimed. THE PUBLIC wants conven- ience food according to Costel- ey, and he doesn't think con- venience foods are less nutri- tious than their natural Counter- parts. He admits that a r a w potato is more nutritious than a frozen french fry. But he points out that potatoes are not eaten raw. After processing in the average kitchen, a potato h a s about as many nutrients as a frozen french fry. He added that the cereal in- dustry's critics will not look at the facts about sugar. "The per capita consumption of sugar has not increased since World War I"" Costeley said. "There is no evidence that people become conditioned to eating increas- ingly larger amounts of sugar." Costeley claims there is a general lack of understanding about food. So called "organic food" contains inorganic v i t a- mins and minerals. Everything is made up of chemicals. "So people should stop asking why we put chemicals in their cer- eal," he added. PEOPLE misunders'and t h e role of food additives," he claimed. "They see the words BHT and BHA on the side of a cereal box and they want to know why ... Those two chem- icals are antitoxidants t h a t keep the fats in the cereal from turning rancid. Rancid fats are very dangerous to eat," Coste- ley added. According to Costeiev, fresh garden grown spinach has Eub- stances in it that couldn't pass a foodaadditive safety test that BHT and BHA can. Costeley would not reveal ei- ther Kellogg's advertising or research budget. He explained that people might be tempted to compare the two budgets and get a false impressi xi. Eri- dently, Kellogg's emoys fcir PhD nutritionists as well as Cos- teley himself. Their job conists primarily of reviewing researen literature and keeping abreast of the new research being done in the field. "OUR ROLE is not to do re- search, that's the university's job," Costeley clarifed. "Pe,-. pIe also should understand that many of our products ha, bee around for years. Corn Flakes are almost 70 years old. All the nutrition research has been done on a product like that. But we have to keep speeding mon- ey on advertising we exect to keep a major share of the mar- ket." Peggy Ravich is one of the coordinators of the Food Ac- "Americans are eating themselves to illness and death." tion Coalition, the griua spore- soring Food Week at the Uni- versity. She is also a regisiered dietician. She claimed advertis- ing is just one of -he things that is conditioning us to a high sugar diet. "Children are told they have to eat their meat and vcge- tables before they can get thefr reward of dessert," Ravich claimed. "Dessert becomes the thing strived for. People begin to see highly sweetened foods as desirable. We eat far t o o much sugar," she maintained. RAVICH WENT on to say that sugar is too high in calories while it does not supply enough nutrition. "Refined sugar has al- most no nutritional value ether than calories. Honey at least 'has a few vitamins, but it is as bad as refined sugar in eeery other respect," she said. According to Ravich, sugar is absorbed into the blood staeam very quickly where it raises the body's blood sugar level. This increase signals the panc..as to overproduce insulin in order to control the blood sugar !evel and to transport the sugar to the proper areas of the body. Idea. ly, the blood sugar level shoumld be as constant as possible. The overproduced insulin then de- presses the blood sugar level. If a person continues to eat high levels of sugar, the pan- creas may become uncontroll- able, and hypoglyce mia (low blood sugar) or diabetes can result. Ravich spoke of a num- ber of studies which link ?hese diseases to sugar. IN COUNTRIES where sugar consumption is high, diabetes is "rampant." Ravich pointed out that this kind of diabetes is different from hereditary dia- betes. However, if neglected, the effects can be equally bad. The problem with refined grains is different, according to Ravich. "Refining, removes tt e outside part of the grai. This husk contains most of the B vitamins and most of the pro- tein. Cereal companies will say they fortify the cereal: that is, they put some of the vitamins back," she said. Ravich added, "Nutrition is a young science and we don't know all the vitamins the body needs or what effect they have on the body or which of them might be in the part of the grain that refining removes." Further, Ravich explained that "vitamins must be sipplied to the body in the proper propor- tions. "Too much of a vitamin can be bad if not enough of the vitamin with which it chemical- ly reacts is supplied as well. Too much of one thing can use up all of another thing and cause a shortage in the body." The dietician claims that "un- refimed foods are more likely to have the correct balance of vitamins and minerals" FRANCIS LARKIN, Professor of nutrition at tie University's School of Public Healtn, stress- ed that associations batween re- fined sugars and grains a n d some diseases are only indi- cated, not proven. He went on to say that one of the prob- lems with refined grains is their low fiber content. Ameri- cans eat relatively low-fiber diets. Fiber is need.d to keep the intestional tract exercised. Larkin pointed to research which indicates that there may be a higher incidence of bowel cancer in societies with lcw- fiber diets. "I don't doubt tnat m o s t food would be mo:e nutritious if it were less processed,' Lar- kin speculated. "The que.stion is would Americans give up the convenience of processed food for better nutrition?' Michael Shapiro is a gradu- ate student in Journalism. bf -- - - - --- TI1 MILWAUKEE JOURNAl FieldNewspaper Syndicate.,1976 Have him sign this. I'm not too high on his scout's honor!' proposal insufficient A NTENSE NEGOTIATIONS have occurred between Graduate Employees' Organ- ization and University of Michigan bar- gainers over the past several days. These negotiations have been fruitful in many ways. They have lead to tentative agree- ment on the issues of unit recognition and class size and brought both sides closer together on the remaining issues. GEO has always felt that serious collective bargain- ing is the only path to the resolution of the disputes. This belief has been reconfirmed by the recent progress at the negotiating table. Yesterday afternoon, GEO and U of M officials jointly agreed to ask for a postponement of the fact-finding hearings that were originally scheduled to begin to- day. Administration bargainers have ap- parently realized that collective bargaining serves the best interests of all, while the charade of fact-finding can only prolong the strike. On Monday evening GEO presented a compromise proposal to the Administration that could serve as the basis for an even- tual agreement and bring an end to the strike. The key proposals in our package covered economics, class size, unit recog- nition and agency shop. On each of these issues GEO made significant fallbacks from our previous positions. The University bargainers rejected GEO's compromise Monday evening. However, collective 'bargaining between the two sides continued and led to the tentative resolution of the complex unit recognition and class size issues. Yesterday afternoon, the administration team presented GEO with its proposal to end the dispute. Agency shop is one of GEO's highest nriority issues. The administration's latest offer calls for an agency sho only after 50 ner cent of the GSA bargaining unit sign -niono authorization cards requesting it. This is an unaccentable offer. GEO was d-zignated as the bargaining agent for all *Tnjdrsity GSAs in an election held last tion size during the current semester. We cannot agree to this stipulation. The size of fraction is supposed to reflect the amount of work for a particular job. If the frac- tion does not correspond to the actual work performed, a grievance can be filed. The administration's current offer asks GSAs to make one of the key proposals in our contract meaningless for the current se- mester. Our contract cannot be imple- mented in a piecemeal fashion. We must be able to use the grievance procedure ef- fectively to correct inequities as soon as the contract is signed. The administration's current economic offer calls for a 10 per cent rebate on tui- tion this term ($55 for most GSAs), tuition frozen at $440 for full time enrollment and a 5.6 per cent calary increase for the 1975-6 academic year. While the adminis- tration has moved on economics, it has simply not moved enough. CEO has con- tinuously shown good faith by making sub- stantial concessions on economics. Today, CEO again revised its economic proposal. We are asking for a 15 per cent tuition re- bate for the current semester, tuition frozen at $420 and a 7 per cent salary increase for the 1975-6 academic year. This proposal would reduce tuition for GSAs next year to the 1972-3 rate. A good economics pack- age is the cornerstone of the labor con- tract. The administration's proposal, while it shows progress, is not sufficient. While CEO cannot accept an agreement based on the administration's latest pro- nosal, we feel that significant progress is being made at the negotiating table and that agreement can be reached speedily if both sides continue good faith efforts to end the current dispute. In an attempt to reach agreement we have again revised onr economic package. GEO calls on the University administration to remain flexible nn the issues and to contine bareninini. WNan acr-ement is reached we call on the administration to issue with us a letter sexism To The Daily: I FIND YOUR editorial "Sportswomen Shortchanged," (February 12, 1975) hypocriti- cal on your part. In view of the sexism promoted in the, sports section of The Daily, you too are shortchanging sportswomen. Two weeks ago (January 31), in reporting scheduled sports events you listed "swimming," followed by "women's sw:m- ming." What are you implying by this distinction? It seems to be saying that there is real swimming and then there is that other kind of swimming that women do. You had better take a close look at the sexism you promote and affe~t some changes before you accuse "the big U" of the same. You could take a step toward decreasing sexism in your news- paper by adding 4 letters to the sports page - MEN's -- as an adjective to swimming where appropriate. Certainly that is not too difficult a ta,. -Bernadette Walter February 12 response To The Daily: GOSH, MARK Pontoni, I'm just an innocent dupe of the opressive University like you, ya know? I sure wish our ideologies could be the s q in e so we could smash the system together. But since they aren't, why expose your und -rdevlop- ed sense of your own interests Letters Still, I hope you got a lot of practice with GEO which you can use someday for some'hing that really concerns you. -Wayne Johnson February 26 Detroit To The Daily: I WOULD LIKE to answer Nicholas Orlyk's (Letters: Feb. 4) inane attack on the Daily and the media in general for calling Detroit Murder City. I don't know what sissy su- burb Orlyk comes from, pro-1 bably Grosse Point, but he couldn't be a truehDetroiter. 1 As someone who lived and worked in the city for 21 years, including some of its worst1 neighborhoods, I assure every-l one that Detroiters are proud of the city's image. Detroiters love 'the fear that comes into a1 stranger's eyes when he or she says "You live where? Isn't it1 dangerous?" Even in foreign 1 countries people know about1 Detroit.1 Also please note that every 9 movie ever made about Detroit has been about crime, drugs or murder. Usually all three. The 4 only well known popular s o n g about Detroit has en outsider singing the refrain "I wanna go home". IT'S WELL known in Detroit1 that people wanted the Po!'ce 1 "Stress" unit ended bcause they1 didn't think the police should 1 have all the fun killing people.' to Th( troit scene as the wave of the future I intend to suggest a new city symbol :o Mayor Young the next time he visits from Jamaica. A crossed coke spoon and .357 Magnum on a field of red. Detroit, love it or else. -Michael Shapiro February 4 imperialism To The Daily: WHEN THE University found itslf in the midst of the national economic crisis, the Administra- tion began to do some penny- pinching of its own - by cutting back on the needs of its stu- dents and teachers. But stu- dents refused to take the cut- backs lying down and fought back with a school-wide strike. Third world students respond- ed to continued attacks by the University by occupying t h e Administration Building to force the University to begin to meet their demands for an end to the U's racist policies toward them. When the Defense De- partment and the U tried to strengthen their position by re- instituting credit for ROTC, stu- dents, seeing what was happen- ing, fought back with a rally and demonstration to defeat the attempt. In Vietnam and Cambodia, where the U.S. contioues to pour billions to protect its interests by trying to suppress the na- tional liberation struggles there, the people continue to fight 'back against impes:-ialist ag- comes out of all these struggles is the ned for unity among the people. We are finding in our strikes and demonstrations that our main strength lbes in our unity. The people ofk he Middle East know that the key ',o their eventual victory over U.S. im- perialism is their united .e- sistance. Without unity, t h e people and the people's revolu- tionary movements ara weak, but the people united will never be defeated! In order to build the unity be- tween the American and Arab peoples, the Organization of Arab Students and the Revolu- tionary Student Brigade are pre- senting a program on the Mid- dle East on Thursday,February 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. To be able to link up our struggles it is necessary to understand what are the root causes of the oppression and exploittation of the Arab peo- ple, how they are fighting back, and how their struggle is related to other struggles in the Third World and especially to our struggles here in the U.S. LIKE THE Indochinese, the Arab people are playing a lead- ing role in the world-wide fight against U.S. imperialism. We've got to link our struggle with theirs and build the united front against our common enemy - U.S. imperialism. Come to the program Fen. 27. -Revolutionary Student Brigade To The Daily: IT SEEMS that strikes are commonplace inmtoday's world. At the University in the hal- lowed halls of higher learning, students are given an education and made ready to meet t h e challenges of society. It is im- possible to argue that a college graduate at the University of Michigan is ill-prepared to meet the outside world and reality. Today the average student is no longer confined to such a nar- row area in choosing to sup- port or reject thesdemands of GEO - the graduate s t u d e n t teaching union. The student now may broaden his educational experience by giving the Third World Coalition recognition in its takeover of the school's administration building. It is good that all the state aid, i.e., loans, grants, scholarships, and my 900 plus dolars a year in tuition c a n help both these groups achieve a sense of purpose and generate financial support for them. IT IS GREAT that quota sys- tems and minority aid programs are supported by increased tax- ation of people who don't bene- fit. My only wish is that by be- ing an A, nerican, white male of German ancestry and being a minority in the world's popula- tion, I could qualify for minor- ity financial aid and h a v e things handed to me on a gold platter. -John Lee Hammer