THE MICHIGAN DAILY ednesday, March 27, 1974 iI .. 1 l 1 /l1 People! Music! Food! BACH CLUB PRESENTS WINE and CHEESE EXTRAVAGANZA Featuring DAVID BARWICK HARPSICHORD Playinq Works by SCAR LATTI, PURCELL, SWEELINCK, and RAMEAU Thur., Mar. 28, 8 p.m. E. Quad, Greene Lounge EVERYONE INVITED No musical knowledge needed. ADMISSION 90c (this week only) Assorted Wines and Cheeses served afterward. Further info.: 482-5858 Nutritionist fears food crisis (Continued from Page 1) world would fit in the Grand Can- yon. Some take solace in the fact that half the population of the world could fit into New York City and be able to dance the twist in average nightclub proximity. But is this the future world we want?" Borgstrom urged the audience to develop an awareness of the food shortage crisis and admitted there was no solution. "INDIA IN TEN years - even with zero population growth-will need 30 per cent more food,' illu- strated Borgstrom. "And there are no new continents-" I U Borgstrom suggested a ":iew agenda for mankind" as a treat- j ment for the food shortage prob-" lem. "We have to have an agendai where food distribution discrepan-I cies are recognized and handled," said Borgstrom. Borgstrom described the discrep- ancies between the United States to the rest of the world: "There is three-and-a-half times more pro- tein per person in the United Statesj than any nutritionist would say is necessary. And they don't know where it comes from. The tragedyx of Western man is that he thinks heat comes from the stove, and food comes from the corner gro-' cery." The cause of imbalanced food 1 distribution worldwide was basicl-.t ly economic, n o t e d Borgstrom. "World trade of food was not tot feed the hungry-those who needed it-but to feed the white man, thet well-to-do. The courses of the richt and the poor are bent on collisionr -if not with each other, with the world's natural resources." Borgstrom predicted a coming public realization of the severitys of the world's resource shortages. The energy crisis is not an epi- sode, said Borgstrom. "It's ther great turning point for mankind." c "OUR EXTRAVAGANCE cannot about my generation, we continue," scolded Borgstrom. 'We made a mess of it." are improving our standard of liv- Borgstrom looked over his ing at the cost of future genera- r es at the student audienc tions - and in a pre-meditatedsat tsudetyudiosa way." stated, "It's up to you to sa Looking back at the past, Borg. world. What the world needs strom said ruefully, "I would say is the courage of despair." have glass- e and ve the today WE NEVER STOP TRYING! R. K. 8-oz. refills 89c this week U-M STYLISTS at the UNION House receives report (Continued from Page 1) The jurors detailed 45 "overt ner, the counsel and minority coun- acts" in the conspiracy indict- sel of the committee. ment covering all seven, including They went over the materials meetings at which President Nix. with the'judge, item by item, in a on was known to be present. There process that took two hours. Then, is no mention of the President in with police guarding their way, the listing of acts. they transported the satchel to the '1Haldeman's lawyer, John Wil- committee offices in a converted son, told the Court of Appeals he Capitol Hill hotel. assumes that the grand jury's evi- "I have no comment at all about dence includes a tape recording the material and I will make no of a meeting March 21, 1973 when comment," said Doar. He and Jen- Nixon heard of payments . to the ner presented the judge with a Watergate defendants to keep them letter from Rodino authorizing the quiet. turnover. Haldeman and former counsel Observing the proceedings was John Dean III were in that meet- Peter Kreindler of the special pro- ing and one of the counts against secutor's office. Haldeman is that he lied in quot- ing the president as saying such THE ORIGINAL Watergate payments would be wrong. grand jury heard evidence for Assistant Special Watergate more than 20 months before in- Prosecutor Philip Lacovara told dicting the seven men. the appeals court hearing that the _-_ ~materials include an "index which --- 1lists events involving .the Presi- dent which the grand jury found may be important or pertinent to nA the impeachment inquiry." U I grea tuving oinformanknd. I t- Ce ..)I IC J DR. ED PIERCE To Congress To volunteer contact: 994-3540 Paid for by Pierce for Congress impeachment inquiry." our AlTExNToS 1 r i .1 EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY-MAJOR EVENTS COMMITTEE is pleased to announce the only Detroit area performance of THE TEMPTATIONS with special guest stars Tower of Power :.x. ti in ft I Bowen Fieldhouse r. April 5-8:00 p.m. TICKETS: $6.00 (reserved), " $5.00 and $4.00 (general) AVAILABLE AT: McKenny Union, Grinnell's, Hud- son's, Ann Arbor Music Mart, Huckleberry Party Store,, and Spaghetti Bender. "One of those great ones that every once in a long while lets us know that the universe has something really mysteriously great 'going' for humanity." -R BUCKMINSTER FULLER A nnVpl hv i \ciUII1s rUI L