Page 10-Saturday, October 8, 1977-The Michigan Daily House: Did Park ~of ay Tip's renlt? WASHINGTON (AP)-The House ethics committee'is investigating an allegation that South Korean rice dealer Tongsun Park may have paid some of Speaker Thomas O'Neill's rent, O'Neill's office said yesterday. Calling the allegation ridiculous, the speaker's administrative aide, Gary Hymel, said O'Neill is gathering canceled rent checks to prove the allegation is incorrect. HYMEL SAID Rep. John Flynt (D-Ga.), chairman of the House ethics committee, told him the panel is issuing subpoenaes for O'Neill's rent recor- ds to investigate the allegation.- Hymel quoted the speaker, who was out of town, as saying, "it is ridiculous." "I've been subject to a lot of calls and crackpot statements. I live my life in a goldfish bowl," Hymel quoted O'Neill as saying. "In this case Eddie and I paid the rent." O'NEILL AND REP. Edward P. Boland (D-Mass. shared an apartment for 10 years before Mrs. O'Neill moved to Washington when her husband' became speaker. A federal grand jury has indicted Park on criminal charges of bribery and trying to buy influence in Congress for the South Korean government with cash and favors. O'Neill has said his only involvement with Park was attending a birth- day party Park gave for him at the lavish Georgetown Club. CATASTROP HECAUSEEDRBy INTERENTIONI NEWSPAPER QUOTES DOCTORS: Biko brain damaged at death immanuel Velikovsky, one of the greatest scientists of , our time, gives startling $ geological evidence to i' support his revolution- s' ary theory that the dis- asterous cataclysms * which rocked our planet and destroyed entire civil- izations were brought about by incredible forces outside the world itself.. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - A newspaper quoting physic- ians who examined Steve Biko in his final days said yesterday the black leader apparently suffered brain dam- age and bruises before his death in pri- son last month. An independent research institute re- ported, meanwhile, that a record 662 persons are being detained without trial in South Africa. Biko was being held under laws allowing indefinite deten- tion when he died under mysterious cir- cumstances in a prison cell in the capital city of Pretoria Sept. 12. HIS DEATH provoked an inter- national outcry and has become the focus of anti-government protest by blacks and white liberals in this white minority-ruled country. w ei (Continued from Page 1) of the minimum was defeated 77 to 14. The Senate rejected by a vote of 74 to 24 an amendment to totally exempt youths 16 to 19 years old from the minimum wage requirement. It then turned back by a 55 to 38 vote a proposal to allow teenagers to be hired at 85 percent of the minimum wage for an indefinite period; defeated 55 to 38 a rider to permit initial youth em- ployment for six months at 75 percent of the minimum; and defeated by a vote of 49 to 44 a provision to set a sub- minimum wage for teenagers at 85 per- cent of the adult floor for their first six months of employment. SPONSORS of the amendments con- tended that the "youth opportunity dif- ferential" would provide an incentive to small business to hire some of the two million teenagers in the labor force who are unable to find jobs. Sen. Harrison Williams (D-N.J.), chairman of the Senate Human Resources Committee, led the ap- position, asserting that a lower minimum wage for youth would com- pound the unemployment problem and see youths taking jobs that otherwise would be filled by adults with families to support. Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) said the subminimum wage would pit 14- to 19-year-olds against 20- to 24-year-olds, including many unem- ployed Vietnam veterans, and be a divisive influence in American society. "IT IS A VERY risky business," Byrd said. "We should not create a discriminatory two-tiered system." Biko, 30, was generally considered the founder of the "black conscious- ness"movement inSouth Africa. The liberal Rand Daily Mail said in its front-page report that doctors who examined Biko in the week before his death' found symptoms of apparent brain damage, including red blood cells in a spinal tap. THE DOCTORS would not comment, however, on whether they believed the apparent brain injuries were caused by physical assault. The doctors also said they found no evidence that Biko was on a hunger strike, the Mail reported. Authorities said after his death that the 30-year-old black activist had been refusing food for a week. The M+ail said three doctors who ex- amined the 6-foot-2 Biko in detention that week found he was overweight. THE NEWSPAPER said security po- lice and doctors were deeply concerned about Biko's deteriorating condition, Two push Huron Tow (Continued from Page 1) cent are of mixed ages and occupations. Joseph Hargett of Reaume & Dodds said he has seen publicity for turning Huron Towers to a co-op, but doesn't "really know what they have in mind." He said his company has "no intention" of bidding for the building, and thus isn't overly-concerned about who assumes ownership. RESIDENTS of the 20-year-old com- plex seem supportive of the co-op idea, but are a little wary of how it would in- volve them. "It's probably a good idea," said Charles Held, an architect. "But it will ineed a lot of support from tenants and I don't know if the support exists because most of the people here are transient."' Schoolteacher Rosalie Wotila said a co-op should be formed so "we can be sure we can protect ourselves." } MIKE JOHNSTON, a local factory worker, said he's worried that for- mation of a co-op would lead to more building damage. "I've never lived in a co-op and I don't know what happens in them," he said. "The building is in poor shape now ... I just hope a co-op won't cause even more vandalism." According to HUD's Day, two similar instances have occurred in Detroit over the past two years when residents have attempted to purchase buildings from HUD for conversion to co-ops. Both groups. were turned down. because HUD. decided such conversions weren't ad- vantageous. Klein said much of the outcome depends on turnout at tomorrow's meeting. "Tom (Stitt) and I aren't going to knock on every door of Huron Towers. .people are going to have to speak out in support of a co-op conver- sion," he said. Scarcity no cause of 'U' bldg. proj eet but none of the doctors thought him near death. Asked whether he thought Biko had been beaten, one of the physicians, Dr. Colin Hersch, said, "I cannot tell you anything about whether he was manhandled or not. What I would like most of all is to find out the truth of this matter ... what happened and why he died." Authorities have ordered an in- vestigation of possible foul play in Biko's death. world hunger-expert endorsed IMMEUFIL ViiKINSKY author of WORLDS IN COLLISION (Continued from Page 1) "Quantity of land has a lot less to do with hunger than who controls that land," she said. LAPPE CITED other paradoxes in the system. Using New Mexico as an example, the author told of land irri- gated at publictexpense on which grapes were cultivated for brandy, while obviously hungry people had to farm the scrap of land between the grapes and the road. Lappe blamed this paradox on an "orientation toward the export and luxury" market. Another myth dissolved by Lappe is the old standby "Bigger is Better." She mentioned evidence of small land holdings in Asia and Latin America which were agriculturally more productive than larger farms. "A family that depends on that production (the smaller farm) will put more into it," she said. TURNING BACK to the problem of exports, Lappe noted the fallacy of "trade justice," in which export ear- nings by underdeveloped countries benefited the "luxuries for the elite," rather than being channeled into the nation's development., "If trade is a hinge on which under- developed countries hang," warned Lappe, "they'll be constantly vulnerable." AS AMERICANS, Lappe said we must ascertain how our tax money is being used. She mentioned U.S. support in the form of foreign aid to such places as the Philippines, where a dictatorship does not control food production to the best needs of the people. Additionally, Lappe urged con- sideration of worker-managed farms and land reform. "We have to tell people there is enough," she said. "Only be loosening up will we solve the problem and have people work together." (Continued from Page l) The laboratory and general class- room building proposed for the Flint Campus would cost an estimated $13.5 million. It would provide about 176,000 square feet of floor space, according to Bob Wilson, assistant to the chancellor for campus develop- ment. Other area projects included on Milliken's list are a music building at Eastern Michigan University in Yp- silanti and housing at the new wo- men's correctional institution in Pittsfield Township. Limited steel imports could up U.S. prices $1.95 81064 Now in paperback from ~OCKE\ BOK The final myth she discounted is one which states that the advance of poor people is a hindrance to the rich. "WE ARE ALL victims 'of tie same forces. . . their (the poor's) liberation is our liberation," she said. After writing Diet For A Small Planet in 1971, Lappe said~she realized that she had better take her work more seriously. "Government officials and laboratory experts aren't going to solve_ the problem," she said. The solution, she said, will only come by "changes that you and I alone can incite." (Continued from Page 1) recommendations on what should be done is expected to be completed in about six weeks. More than 13,000 workers were laid off in the industry during August and another 6,000 layoffs have' been announced. President Carter is to meet Thursday at the White House with company officials, union lead- ers, environmentalists and consumer representatives to discuss the indus- try's problems. CARTER AND other administra- tion officials already have made public their opposition to import quotas even though the industry con- tinues to push for them. The American Iron and Steel Insti- tute said that steel imports in August were at a 32-month high of 1.8 million tons, equal to about one of every five tons consumed in the U.S. market. The council said imports probably will account for about 18 per cent of consumption this year, up from about 16 per cent last year. IT SAID THE recent price hikes by U.S. steel producers, which totaled 9.4 per cent alone in the 12-month period ending in August, have con- tributed to the surge in imports. The report quoted one study as indicating that if U.S. prices were 10 per cent less, imports would be down 11 per cent and U.S. production and employment would increase by seven per cent. But the study also appeared sym- pathetic to the profit performance in the industry, which it said amounted to just 3.6 per cent of sales last year - "substantially below" the average for all nanufacturing industries. Profits were 6.4 per cent of sales in 1974. THE REPORT said the raw mater- ials used by theindustry are up sharp- ly in cost, led by coal prices, 138 per cent; iron ore, up 76 per cent, and steel scrap, up 133 per cent. Labor costs also have risen sharply, and the steel industry compensation, which was 40 per cent higher than other manufacturing industries in 1973, now is about 60 per cent higher. The 1977 steel contract settlement will raise hourly compensation by 30 per cent over three years, or about 9.3 per cent each year. Demand for steelin this country and throughout the world likely will remain below production, the report said. This spells additional trouble for the U.S. industry, which already is operating at only about 80 per cent of capacity. FLYING OBJECTS COLORADO SPRINGS, Coo. (AP) - There were 1,117 man- made objects in space at the end of 1976, according to the North Ameri- can Air Defense Command. The number of satellites and pieces of debris from fragmented rocket bodies is up from the 1975 record of 929 objects. t=5 to You don't like the shape America's in? O.K. change it. ~EQf $ NATIVE FILM FESTIVAL-Multi-Purpose Room, the UGLI, 9.4 GUATEMALAN TEXTILES, CRAFTS, DISPLAY AND MARIMBA - Fishbowl, all day WORKSHOPS & CLASSROOM VISITS ON NATIVE ISSUES, LIFE & KNOWLEDGE . WOMEN IN TRADITIONAL CULTURES NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES CLASS, Tues. 9-10:30 GENEVA TREATY CONFERENCE AND MAINE LAND RIGHTS TRADITIONAL MUSIC-CULTURE--A Workshop . ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES-Coyete-Nat. Resources, 4 p.m. PHILLIP DEERE, A Muskoge medicine man, spiritual advisor to the American Indian Movement, and a delegate of the International Treaty Conference to the U.N. hearing in Geneva. ADRIAN CHAVEZ, a Quiche (Mayan) elder and man of knowledge. COYOTE, A Wylaki activist, speaks on spiritual values relating to ecology, natural life-styles, and community. RARIHOKWATS, founder of Akwesasne Notes, speaks on current issues. FOUR ARROWS POTLUCK AND SOCIAL DOINGS - S. QUAD dining room 5-7:30 America's got too many poor people, right? And there's plenty of other problems too. Take our cities. The shape of some of them is enough to make you cry. And waste. and ignorance, the cycle of poverty that traps one generation after another because they're too busy just holding on to get ahead. The ravages of hunger and disease. l ; +# i t'sE silet r m1 r ci itti+ cor O.K. now's the time for action.. . join VISTA: Volunteers in Service to America. If you're eighteen or eighty-great, we want you. 'We want you to organize in your com- munity, or someone else's. Helping miners in Appalachia learn a new - skill. Or migrant farm workers' children to read. We want you to organize a clinic in Watts. Or fight roverty around the corner. We don't home about either. But there's one thing we can promise you, there will be plenty to write home about. About the things you've learned while working with others. And the progress you've made. And that feeling deep inside you, know- ing that you've returned the favor Ame rica gave you. 0. K. you know what's wrong, right? Now go ahead, change it. In VISTA. Call VISTA toll - ii u n~