Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited ond managed by students at the University of Michigan Waste in a starving world Tuesday, January 21, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Pilot: Struggle for survival PERHAPS some members of the LSA Executive committee are misinformed. Apparently in their consideration of disbanding the Pilot Program, committee members seem- ed to think that students don't think much of the program. This assump- tion is false. The general state of disbelief among students in Pilot as they re- acted to the Executive Committee's consideration did not lull them into inaction. Pilot students were quick- ly moving to assure the College of their desire to keep Pilot going and of their strong recommendation that alternatives be seriously considered. Petition drives, plans for protest, and massive letter-writing campaigns be- gan almost immediately. The conver- sation in the cafeterias of Alice Lloyd, where the program is housed, center- ed mainly on the issue at hand, and people knew what that issue was: a struggle for survival for Pilot Pro- gram. THE PROGRAM, started in 1962, has had a history of educational in- novations. Pilot's history of exciting, progressive learning was continued this year and enhanced by the addi- tion of the Theme Experience on per- sonal and social change. Though as yet nothing has been confirmed, it seems amazing that LSA would even consider disbanding Pilot Program. For the almost 550 students who live in Alice Lloyd, the Program is definitely not expend- able. Though no one talks about it, if the University would release some of the "special" $44 million dollars that they have been saving, the threat of a state appropriations cut of four percent would not be as threatening. In between the classes in academic- ville, the new chant may well become and possible should become "Free the 44". THIS UNIVERSITY'S LACK of com- mittment to progressive learning is depressing. As soon as a hint of an appropriation by the state hits the wind, the University immediately looks for ways to cut off some of its more unique programs, some of which make the University bearable to plenty of students. There seem to be various other al- ternative solutions that are viable. One may be to free the 44, or dust maybe a small percentage of it. An- other possible solution is the cutting of those academic departments whose enrollments do not warrant their budgets. It has been asserted in re- cent days that Rackham uses it's bud- get inefficiently and as a result wastes money. It could easily survive a budget of about four per cent. One wonders how many other inefficien- cies could be axed. RUT PILOT PROGRAM is no effic- By ALAN KETTLER THE FIRST organized arrangement of molecules that could be called life was concocted out of the non-living in- gredients of the sea billions of years ago. One of its requirements for self perpet- uation was that it reproduce and grow by the subsequent division and addition of molecules. This addition of mole- cules allowed the divided organism to regain its parent's size, divide, and for- ever continue this cycle of reproduction. 'In simple terms, this primeval ances- tor of our infinitely more complex bodies had to eat to live. With time and ma- terials, the living thing evolved into millions of varied organisms, most of whom are only imprints in ancient rocks, leaving us today with their descendants. AT LEAST IN one way time has not changed the way of life. For during those billions of years of existence, every single species has made its number one preoccupation with life the acquisition of energy, or food, so that it might live, grow, and perpetuate its kind. For ani- mals (plants make their own food), ob- taining food has been serious, business. Individuals who practiced wasteful mod- es of consumption were eliminated by natural selection, for it was then who died, and the thrifty who survived, in times of scarcity. Human beings are by far the most ad- vanced form of life on earth. Still, the need for energy and suzstance through the ingestion of food remains unchang- ed. Man meets this need mainly through agriculture. Although the Modern Era is in part marked by the hundreds of millions of people who do not directly engage in food production, four-fifths of the world's 3.5 bilion people remain directly tied to the land and what food- stuffs it can yield. SIMILARLY, ALL are motivated to work by hunger, their primary day-to- day responsibility. All are on very in- timate terms with what they eat, for their food is the fruit of their own labors. All know that their ability to produce food could decide whether they live or die. Life is precarious, food is precious. But not all are succesful, or so lucky. For now, more than ever, millions of the world's agriculturists are failing to meet their basic needs for survival, and are losing out horribly in the battle against hunger. Due to a bewildering network of many conditions, starvation threatens at least 460 million people to- day, and 10 million are fairly sure to due this year. The effects of starvation on a people are staggering and frightening. As des- cribed earlier this year in a speech by Roger E. Anderson, "It [hungerl en- slaves entire peoples by depriving them of their energies, their senses, and, their dignity. Or it drives them in desperation to emigration, panic, or revolt. It influ- ences the policies and courses of govern- ments and redirects relations among the nations of the world." CHILDREN ARE hardest hit by the absence of food because their growing bodies need food for development. When the body responds to a lack of nutrients in itself, it begins a process whereby it literally feeds on itself. Receiving no external nutritional supply, it seeks out the inventory of its internal supply by first turning to the liver for nourish- ment. Once the liver exhausts itself, protein is removed from cells and brok- en down into useable compounds, and finally, fat is utilized in the same way. Listlessness, dullness, and apathy dom- mate the mental state of the famished person, for the brain is a voracious fur- nace which requires large apiounts vi nutrients for use and growth. Without them, its cells flicker out permanently. Eventually, the child can utter no more than a few sounds, and moves only to gather or ingest food. Suffering from kwashiorkor means that tissue fluids bloat his stomach, and movement is pain- ful because of swelling in his joints. At a certain point the child has no feel- ing of hunger, and cannot eat if given food. Finally, when this empty bag of leather and sticks has consumed its limit of tissues, death removes this ves- tige of a person from one of the most horrible, torturous existences possible. YOUNG CHILDEN, who survive mal- nutrition are often physically and ment- ally retarded for life. Over 300 million children are thus physically deformed in the underdeveloped countries, and they will one day make poor food producers. Uncounted millions of others with stunt- ed brains will make poor students if ever offered the education needed to de- velop a country economically and soc- ially. A generation of already diseased and malnourished adults will have to accent the burden of caring for these hundreds of millions of permanently damaged people. For so, so many people, food is so, so important a matter in living and in dy- ing. Thoughts of food, food, food and its relative abundance permeate the minds of hundreds of millions of farmers around the world. Its presence brings some security and happiness, its ab- sence summons misery, disease, death, disorder. HOPEFULLY, the reader will unaer- stand or feel the importance z nd sacred- ness of food, for its helps in analyzing the sickening decadence to be witnessed in the residence hall cafeterias of this university. There, while whole nations are experiencing the most morbid period in their histories, a carnival-like atmos- phere prevails as vats of perfectly edi- ble food are thrown away. According to estimates made by the university, about $140,000 worth of food is wasted each year in the dorms. This writer, having visited three dorm of- ficials, found that almost 'alf of the re- turned trays inspected contained substan- tial portions of edible, uneaten f o o d. Witnessed were whole oranges cram- med into glasses, half-eaten hamburg- ers, bowls of discarded vegetables, etc. As Mr. Lynford Tubbs, Assistant Direc- tor of Food at the U declared, this food waste is "inexcusable." He rejected the practice because it, along with food theft, dishware breakage and theft, and meal sharing, unfairly forces each stu- dent to pay the costs of these activities. WORDS ARE NOT adequate to de- scribe the miserable insensitivity of this waste. Why waste food?! In the end, taste is absolutely of the minutet rele- vances when one is eating, as food is sustenance and strength while taste is only a momentary sensation on the tongue. Even a lizard can learn through experience and sight to distinguish bad tasting food from good tasting food, and will consequently eat only the good and ignore the bad. Cannot a human rise to such an intellectual level, a n d take only those foods that are palatable to him? A small bit of judgment s sufficient to let the eater know whether or not he will have room in his stomach for a certain morsel. With a liktle fore- sight, the reckless consumption habit of saying "Ugh, I'm full' to a half-eaten hamburger can be avoided. The selfish manner of taking food so that it can be thrown away is indicative of our indifference to or ignorance of the systems of man and nature. Unlike the African subsistence farmer, we're not on intimateterms with what we eat, so it has lost its value. THE TECHNOLOGY that has so sep- arated us from our ties with the earth has destroyed the elementary knowledge and value of digging intd the soil with one's hands, to feel the gristle and smell the clean mustiness of the matter that intimately keeps us so well fed, and which is so forgotten and cloaked by this separation. As the world becomes more of a glo- bal community oit of necessity for world preservation, and we begin to feel the effects of the limits to growth, traditional consumption habits much change. The era of endless, wasteful consumption habits has to end. As a writer in Harp- er's said, "The Earth is not a banquet at which we are free to gorge." The waste of food at the University is in part a manifestation of traditional ideas in a modern capitalist society - that we are free to self-indulge as we please, that all self'interests are legiti- mate, that the individual and his inalien- able rights take social precedence. With such a narrow outlook, the individual loses sight of the effects of his collec- tive actions. WE AND, WHAT we consume are part of a much greater whole. This can be seeh by examining what is re- quired to produce a meal. Our orange juice comes from Florida, our bacon from a midwest meat packer, our cof- fee from Colombia. In short, we eat food that is brought to us from all parts of the globe by boats, planes, trains, and trucks. Prior to the transport of. food, tremendous amounts of energy are spent in plowing, planting, fertilizers, pesti- cides, and irrigation. Later, food must he harvested, processed, shipped pack- aged, refrigerated, and finally cooked. Twelve per cent of our national energy goes into the food system. It has be- come so intensive that for each unit of energy we ingest (or throw away) we use nine times as much energy as in- put to the food system. When food is wasted, every input that helped to pro- duce the food was purely wasted, too. Such folly has no basis for continuation. THE CHINESE philosopher Lao-tzu has some old but relevant words to say concerning our treatment and abuse of the Earth: "Nature sustains itself through three'precious principles, which one does well to embrace and follow. These are gentleness, frugality, and hu- mility." Much work and energy goes into the production of food. Praying for the deliverance of a commodity we have so callously treated, millions suffer and starve. Our notions of superabundance and resource use are archaic and de- structive. Especially now, the Earth and its fruitfulness can no longer be taken for granted. Specifically, each individual must eat his share, and must end his waste of precious food. Alan Kettler is a staff writer for the Editorial Page. ate cut iency. Perhaps a more appropri- way for them to look at it is to down, not out.f -CLIFFORD BROWN New House not unsmudged HE RECENT SHAKEUP in con- gressional committee chairman- ships has been greeted with the mix- ed reaction appropriate for the mix- ed results that were accomplished. Was this a genuine revolution or a cosmetic change? True, the House Democratic Cau- cus did note to depose a pair of reac- tionaries, W. R. Poage of the Agri- culture committee and F. Edward He- bert of Louisiana on Armed Services. And for this they are to be thanked. Poage of Texas has been an ob- struction in the freeway of progress for decades. He has spent much of the last few years attempting to elimi- nate the Food Stamp program or, failing that, get its budget drastically cut. ,)NE CANNOT BE that optimistic about Hebert's replacement on Armed Services, Melvin Price. Con- gressmen on the Armed Services Committee tend to sell themselves to the Pentagon early in their careers. But Hebert, the man who refused to hold hearings on the secret bombing TODAY'S STAFF: News: Gordon Atcheson, Cindy Hill, Josephine Marcotty, Judy Ruskin, Kate Spelman Editorial Page: Vincent Badia, Alan Gitles, Paul Haskins, Marnie Heyn. Arts Page: Ken Fink Photo Technician: Karen Kasmauski of Cambodia, will not be missed. But, having kicked the aforemen- tioned unsavory pair out of power, the House Democrats retained the worst committee chairman of them all -- Wayne Hays of Ohio. Control-. ling the Administration committee, Hays has been blackening the repu- tation of Congress for years. The Administration committee controls the House's expense ac- counts, office supplies, and commit- tee budgets. As committee chairman, Hays has practiced and condoned the kind of petty thievery that has re- duced public esteem for congressmen below that of garbage collectors. One would have though that Hays 'would have been a prime target of the Fighting Liberals who supposed- ly comprise this year's freshman class in Congress. And indeed, the Democratic Steering and Policy com- mittee voted his removal. But Hays also controls the House Democratic Camnaign Committee, with the nower to allot campaign funds, and the freshmen chose to follow their poc- ketbooks. The last major House reform was in 1910, when Speaker Joe Cannon was stripped of his power to dictate committee chairmanships. Maybe in another sixty-five years genuine democracy will come to the House of Representatives. --JOHN KAHLER PIRGIM REPORTS Pharmaceutical laws hurt consumers "WHAT THE LEGISLATURE has given, the Board of Pharmacy is trying to take away. This is the view of one of the consumer organizations which helped to lobby for Michigan's new law on prescription, drugs - which, when it goes into effect at the end of March, will allow pharmacists to save consumers money by filling prescriptions with generic drugs, and will require all pharmacies to post prices. In testimony prepared for a hearing today on rules to implement the new law, PIRGIM director Joseph S. Tuchinsky criticized both the process by which rules were drafted and the proposed rules. Tuchinsky charged that the advisory committee that drew up rules for the Pharmacy Board "contained not a single consumer representative," and met "in virt- ual secrecy." Tuchinsky stated that his complaints to the Board resulted only in an invitation for him to ad- dress the committee, but at a time when he couldn't make it, while no other consumers were even informed of the meetings. The result, he says, is anti-consumer provisions in the proposed rules. TUCHINSKY ALSO charged the Board sent announce- ments of today's formal hearing on the rules to inter- ested parties in the industry, but not to the legislators who sponsored the bill, to affected government agen- cies, or to consumer organizations. The PIRGIM criticisms of the proposed rules concen- trated on attempts to restrict competitive advertising and attempts to reduce the usefulness to consumers of the required price posting. ,The rules would allow a pharmacy to contain only one price sign, the official poster being designated by the Board. A number of discounters, such as the Meijer chain, already have price signs "more useful and conspicuous than your poster," PIRGIM asserted. These would have to be taken down under the proposed rules. "There is no reason why these signs and your poster should not both be displayed," Tuchinsky told the Board. HE ALSO characterized a prohibition on advertising price posting as "offensive to American free enter- prise" and a violation of a section of the new law which specifically allows advertising which is not "false' or misleading." Tuchinsky also criticized the official price list for including only ten generic drugs. Since' consumers can request money-saving generics instead of their branded equivalents under the- new law, Tuchinsky asserted, the sign should tell the generic name of every brand listed and, in each case where both are available, give the price of both the generic and the brand so custom- ers will know how much they may save. He also called for listing the lowest price if several generics are stocked. And, he pointed out, the Board may even have trouble counting. The law calls for a price list of 100 drugs, but the board has listed only 99. AFTER SUPPORTING legislative approval of the new law and working successfully for strengthening amendments, PIRGIM has turned its campaign for more competition between drugs stores to the question of price advertising. A month ago, it filed a petition, supported by a memo from the state Attorney General's office, for an immediate ruling that price advertising of prescrip- tion drugs is legal under Michigan law. Tuchinsky reported today that the petition has made little progress in a month. "The Board is just stalling, putting up pet- ty legal -technicalities to avoid dealing with the issue as long as possible, while consumers continue paying high prices because there is too little information and too little competition. PIRGIM will wait only one more month before taking the question to court," Tuchinsky concluded. PIRGIM REPORTS is an information service of the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan, a stu- dent-funded citizens advocate organization. N ~is Nsv= LcoocJIl.5 ." mw * -- ._ .. > -. ' ' iuN,,, ,hIJ ice' - 4 'it 6;agpwww-- ty ft I . ii ii IIt{ ,; 11t +; :F i I ;laf t t' 'i i :t ;i ' ...---. __---- Letters to The Daily :: ' " ; i f YiR y ''si '7 jfj' irw " ' V Ilri n ! ., (' i {{ 1 ROTC To The Daily: THE CURRVNT controversy over granting academic credit for ROTC coures fails to ad- dress some fundamental ques- tions. I have had experiences here that included substantial aca- demic content and still did not offer academic credit - cours- es at Hillel, volunteer w o r k , study sessions and bull sessions with friends. I have no c o m- plaints; I chose these exper- iences for what I felt they of- fered me. In this regard, there is some- thina lnkrincr in tha Ahnta n of the Universiy, a conscious restatement should be made. MEANWHILE, a worthwhile opportunity will be selected on its own merits. -Martha Minow pen pal To The Daily: I WOULD like for your news- paper to print this ad for me in the hopes that some of the stu- dents would like to take time out and exchange letters with someone who is confined in the Ohio Prison System. I am serv- ing an armed robbery change, and will be out in the fall of this vear. that ter. you may show to this let- --Walter Lee Caruthers P.O. Box 69 No. 129-208 London, Ohio 43140 peace ax To The Daily: WITH THE coming of 1975 and the inevitable task of filing income tax returns pressing, I feel compelled to ask myself and others to think again, about where our tax money goes each year. Many of us work a good part of our lives, and yet that wedge taken from our p a y- rhepks earh month fnor feera fare, housing, medical aid etc. Many will see this as fitting, some will shrug their should- ers, and still others like myself will be outraged at the priori- ties that our government has established. SOME OF THE men in the U.S. are given a legal alterna- tive to participating in the mili-' tary through conscientious ob- jection, and yet seemingly, there are no such alternatives for those of us who do con- scientiously oppose killing and/ or would like to see the major- ity of our tax dollars spent on peaceful efforts which promote life. rather than on weannons and projects, as well as peace-relat- ed research. With the replacement of Wil- ber Mills by Rep. Ullman as Chairperson of the Ways and Means Committee, (he was an opponent of the Bill) it seems possible that the Bill will get consideration in Committee and on the Floor of Congress,. but it will take the continuous ef- forts of those who are in favor of this legislation. THERE IS A steering com- mittee working in Ann Arbor, and a committee working in Washington. If there are people who would like to know more {