t Md gan 4aiy Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Carc inoma in convenient aerosols Tuesday, December 2, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Thin out Navy's whitewash IN AN AGE OF government secrecy, it should come as no surprise that the U.S. Navy has apparently suppressed for two years a scientific report which states that Project Sea- farer might have harmful effects on human life. Seafarer is an extremely low fre- quency (ELF) submarine communi- cations system which the Navy has proposed building in the western por- tion of the state's Upper Peninsula (UP). The possible ill effects from Sea- farer stem from the magnetic and electrical fields which the system would create. The report mentions that preliminary findings reveal humans showed increased levels of triglycerides after exposure to ELF waves. Triglycerides have been link- ed with increased risk of heart dis- ease. Although the report compiled by Editorial Staff GORDON ATCHESON CHERYL PTTATE Co-Editors-in-Chief DAVID BLOMQUIST ............... Arts Editor BARBARA CORNELL .. Sunday Magazine Editor PAUL HASKTNS.... ...Editorial Director DEBRA HURWITZ. Asst. Editorial Direeter MARY LONG ........ Sunday Magazine Editor JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY Sunday Magazine Editor. SARA RIMER................ Executive Editor SI'PHEN SELBST................City Editor JEFF SORENSON..............Managing Editor STAFF WRITERS: Tom Allen, Glen Allerhand, Marc Basson, Dana Baumann, Michael Beck- man, Ellen Breslow, Mitch Dunitz, Ted Ev- anoff, Jim Finkelstein, Elaine Fletcher, David Garfinkel, Tom Godell, Charlotte Heeg, Stephen Hersh, Lois Josimovich, Tom Kett- ler, Linda Kloote, Chris .Kochmanski, Doc Kralik, Jay Levin,. Andy Lilly, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lubens, Teri Mageau, Angeliqiue Matney, Rob Mea- chum, Robert Miller, Jim Nicoll, Maureen Nolan, Ken Parsigian, Cathy Reutter, Jeff Ristine, Annmarie Schiavi, Tim Schick, Kar- en Schulkins, Rick Soble, Tom Stevens, Steve Stojic, Cathi Suyak, Jim Tobin, Bill Turque, Jim Valk, David Weinberg, Margaret Yao. Sports Staff BRIAN DEMING Sports Editor MARCIA MEAKER .... .. Executive Editor LEBA HERTZ ..... ...Managing Editor JEFF SCHILLER..............Associate Editor CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Al Hrapsky, Jeff Liebster, Ray O'Hara, Michael Wilson NIGHT EDITORS: Rick Bonino, Tom Cameron. Tom Duranceau, Andy Glazer, Kathy Henne- ghan, Ed Lange, Rich Lerner, Scott Lewis, Bill Stieg ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Enid Goldman, Marcia Katz, John Niemeyer, Dave Wihak DESK ASSISTANTS: Paul Campbell, Marybeth Dillon, Larry Engle, Aaron Gerstman, Jerome Gilbert, Andy Lebet, Rick Maddock, Bob Miller, Joyce Moy, Patrick Rode, Arthur Wightman Photography Staff KEN FINK PAULINE LUBENS Chief Photographer Picture Editor E. SUSAN SHEINER ........ Staff Photographer GORDON TUCKER.........Staff Photographer TODAY'S STAFF: the seven-member scientific panel does not, state that the system wouldl constitute a definite danger, it re- commends further study. , flOWEVER, a task force appointed by Governor Milliken earlier this year was not given a copy of the re- port because it was designated "for official use only." What constitutes "official use," however, is not made clear. If the report is not made available to a committee appointed to study the Seafarer problem, then of what use is the report? It seems apparent that the Navy was attempting to keep criticism of the project to a mini- mum and to downplay the dangers involved. Although Dr. Andrew Marino, a member of the scientific panel, said the Seafarer project is "a public health danger," a Navy spokesman claimed it would cause no ill effects. "We are satisfied so far from what we have examined there are no ad- verse effects," said Navy Capt. James Naugle. NAUGLE'S STATEMENT complete- ly belies the results reached by the scientific committee. "There's no question that it's going to have an environmental impact, that it is a danger to the environment," said Marino. Despite the Navy's attempt to spuelch criticism of Seafarer, a UP group is actively fighting the pro- ject. People Against Sanguine-Sea- farer (PASS) has charged the De- fense Department with "fraud" and the governor's task force with "in- competence" in failing to uncover the report. In addition, PASS has de- manded that the governor ask the Navy to leave the UP immediately. Clearly, the Seafarer Project is not popular with the residents of the UP - for good reasons. And the de- ceptive actions of the Navy have certainly made these residents even less responsive to the controversial project. Clearly, a more in-depth study of the possible effects of the Seafaier Project on both the environment and human life is necessary. THE GOVERNOR'S task force had requested that a Navy team evaluate the environmental imnact of the project. However, we believe that a more objective party must study the situation. Keeping in mind the Navy's suppression of the criti- cal scientific report, it is hard to believe that it would conduct an im- partial investigation into Seafarer's possible effects on the environment. A new task force should be an- nointed by Governor Milliken in the hones that It will succeed where the last task force failed. And if the conclusions reached by the original scientific panel are reaffirmed, the Navy should abandon the Seafarer Project. By SCOTT THURBER SAN FRANCISCO (PNS) - When you pick up that can of spray deodorant in your bathroom, do you get the un- easy feeling that somebody's watching? If you don't, perhaps you should. Because aerosol-watching is very big these days, and getting bigger. Its par- ticipants include scientists, the govern- ment, manufacturers, merchants, con- servationists, consumer groups, advertis- ing agencies, lawyers and, of course, the media. Underlying all the careful watching, and the sometimes heated arguments it evokes, is the most frightening six- letter word in the language: cancer. Continued heavy use of the major fluorocarbon aerosol propellants will bring about sharp increases worldwide in the incidence of fatal and non-fatal skin cancer, many scientists contend, by seriously depleting the stratospheric ozone layer that shields the earth from the most damaging wavelengths of ultra- violet radiation from the sun. These scientists and their backers say manu- facture and use of the offending pro- pellants should be banned. SPOKESMEN FOR THE aerosol in- dustry not unexpectedly take a sharp- ly different view. Citing other scien- tific opinion, they contend the ozone- depletion/skin cancer link is an un- ?roved hypothesis. They say it would be a major injustice to cripple an eight billion dollar industry on the basis of flimsy evidence. Whatever the validity of the ozone- cancer thesis, the statistics cited by its advocates are alarming: If use of the aerosol-propelled products continues to grow at the expected 10 per cent per year, these scientists say, the resulting depletion of the ozone and increase in radiation could cause between 100,000 and 300,000 new cases of skin cancer a year in the U.S. alone by the year 2000. THE MOUNTING controversy, which has its roots in studies of ozone deple- tion by supersonic transport planes, has been highlighted recently by these de- velopments: ® The Space Agency in November launched a scientific satellite equipped with a special instrument to measure the ozone layer in the troposphere and stratosphere during the next year. They say tests over that long a period are necessary to determine accurately wheth- er the shield is being depleted. * Two scientific groups this summer reported tests that they said confirmed laboratory projections showing that fluor- ocarbons, wafted inert to the strato- sphere, are broken down there by ultra- violet light - releasing chlorine atoms that destroy ozone. One group, the Na- tional Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) took measurements above its facility at Palestine, Tex. The other, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad- ministration (NOAA), used weather bal- loons for tests at Laramie, Wyo. "I THINK OUR RESULTS have dras- tically narrowed room for doubt about the validity of fluorocarbon-ozone de- struction theories," said NCAR chief John Gille. " A study panel from 14 federal agen- cies appointed to assess threats to the >zone shield concluded in June that, if present evidence holds up, aerosol sprays using fluorocarbon propellants should be banished by January 1978. But the study group said final action should await completion, sometime next year, of an intensive study by the National Academy of Sciences. 0 The Consumer Products Safety Com- mission belatedly turned down a peti- tion, seeking a ban, filed a year ago by the Natural Resources Defense Coun- cil (NRDC). Ruby I. Compton, an at- torney in NRDC's Washington office, said the action was "based on a finding that insufficient evidence was available." BUT SHE ADDED: "New scientific evidence, however, has become avail- able since the CPSC ruling." She cited the measurements by the NOAA and the NCAR., * The Consumers Cooperative of Berkeley, with 13 Bay Area grocery stores and more than 7,000 members, halted purchase of all fluorocarbon aero- sols September 1 and will ban sales of all such products December 30. A spokesman said the Co-op action was the first of its kind in the nation, and said it woud be followed by an inten- sive campaign "to encourage the use of alternatives." O Bills to ban the propellants were introduced in Congress and in several states this year, but nothing has got- ten out of committee except in Oregon, Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS where the legislature approved a ban on the propellants, effective in March 1977. * Advertising in newspapers and on television has begun to reflect the grow- ing national concern over the possible dangers of aerosol-caused ozone deple- tion. FOR INSTANCE, Du Pont, describ- ing itself as "the world's leading sup- plier of fluorocarbon propellants," took almost-full-page ads in major newspapers to denounce what it called the "ban now -find out later" approach that it said "is being thrust upon an eight billion dollar segment of industry." There won't be any answers "until some hard facts are produced," the company said, and those facts require extensive investiga- tions. Johnson's Wax took newspaper ads to announce that it has "removed all flior- ocarbon propellants" from its domestic products and is "aggressively reformu- lating our product ingredients worldwide to achieve the same goal." And there has been a significant in- crease in ads, in print and on TV, by makers of anti-perspirants and other products that are not only non-aerosol but "better than aerosol." SIGNIFICANTLY, AEROSOL use has dropped since the aerosol-ozone contro- versay began. In 1972, according to in- dustry figures, 2.77 billion units (bottles or cans) of aerosol-propelled products were produced in the U.S. In 1973 (the latest year for which figures are avail- able) there were 1.38 billion. Of that total, the vast majority (1.24 billion) were personal products, with hair care products and anti-perspirants leading the list. But "even if the use of the propellants were stopped today," warns Dr. Harold S. Johnson, who first linked ozone deple- tion to the SST, "in five to ten years there would be a one per cent decrease in the ozone layer," sufficient to in- crease skin cancer by 8,000 cases a years in the U.S. alone. Scott Thurber is a freelance writer who has previously worked for the San Francisco Chronicle. Copyright Pacific News Service, 1975. ARAB POLICY Toward more effective anti-Semitism By JOSEPH HOSHEN TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS af- ter voting to establish a Jewish State, the United Nations Gen- eral Assembly has now endorsed a resolution passed by its Third Committee on 17 October de- scribing Israel as "the racist regime in occupied Palestine," and stigmatizing Zionism as "a form of racialism and racial discrimination." For good meas- ure, the preamble of the resolu- tion asserts that "Zionism is a threat to world peace and se- curity" and calls upon "all countries to oppose this racist and imperialist ideology." Just prior to adopting this resolution, the General Assem- bly passed two other resolutions which were also violently anti- Israel in language and intent. The first called for the partici- pation of Arab terrorist groups, known as the Palestine Libera- tion Organization (the P.L.O.) in the Geneva Conference for Peace in the Middle East. The second decided to establish a committee, modelled on the U.N. Committee Against Apartheid, for "the exercise of the inalien- able rights of the Palestinian people." In fulfilling its man- date, this committee is author- ized "to receive and consider suggestions and proposals from any state and intergovernmental region organization and the Pal- estine Liberation Organization." NOW WHO IS the United Na- tions inviting to Geneva and who is it requesting to submit proposals on questions relating to peace in the Middle East? ist in its aims, and facist and Nazi in its means. Israel is the tool of the Zionist movement and a human and geographical base for world imperialism." YASSER ARAFAT is even more candid: "We shall never stop until we can go back home and Israel is destroyed ... The goal of our struggle is the end of Israel, and there can be no compromises or mediations .. We don't want peace, we want victory. Peace for us means Is- rael's destruction, and nothing else." (Quoted in the New Re- public, November 16, 1974). The sponsors of these three U.N. resolutions were the Arab states, whose racist record is almost without parallel. Since gaining their independence ear- lier this century, almost every one of these states has worked methodically, and often brutally, against the non-Muslim and non- Arab minorities in its midst: * In the 1930's and 1940's, the Iraquis put the Assyrian Christ- ians to the sword; " In the late 1950's, and through the 1960's, the Blacks in the Sudan suffered what amounts to genocide; * In the 1960's, the Kurds in Syria were harshly repressed; * Likewise, from the 1960's to the spring of this year, the Kurds in Iraq were systemati-, cally massacred; * And now it appears that the fate of the Maronites in Lebanon is to be similarly sealed. It should be mentioned that the United Nations has not seen fit to concern itself with any News: Gordon. Atcheson, Fletcher, Cheryl Pilate, Sara Tim Schick, Curt Smith_ Elaine Rimer, Editorial Page: Marc Basson, Debra Hurwitz, Tom Kettler, Ted Lambert, Tom Stevens Arts Page: David Blomquist Photo Technician: Pauline Lubens officer in the army who has fourght Israel." This stereotyp- ing of the Jews is in the best tradition of classical anti-Semit- ism, and inevitably brings back echoes of other, tragic canards of the 1930's insinuating that the Jews "dominated the econo-. my." SUCH LANGUAGE is most disquieting when it comes from the President of Egypt, so soon after the signing of the Israel- Egypt agreement. Rallying behind the Arabs to pass their resolutions were ev- ery totalitarian and dictatorial regime represented at the Unit- ed Nations. A political satirist in the London Times on October 22nd, pointedly attacked the phony concern for human rights implicit in theavotestof "Mongolia, Cuba, Uganda, the Soviet Union, Saudi Arabia, East Germany, Albania, Sri Lanka, China, Libya, Indonesia, Yemen, Syria, Poland and scores of oth- er places run by people who have been engaged for anything up to the lastahalf century or so in the extermination of dig- nity, integrity and their oppo- nents, with enthusiasm, rubber truncheons and a considerable degree of success." SIMILARLY, a columnist in the Washington Post on October 29th aptly observed that the Third Committee's anti-Zionist vote was "a vote by numer- ous regimes representing noth- ing but themselves against a single nation, Israel." He used the term "regimes" advisedly, because "given the nature of the regimes of U.N. members, there are very few nations, meaning peoples, represented there." With a good deal of rea- son, he went on to remark that many of these regimes "use their energies to pound togeth- er human elements that lack cultural affinites. To such re- gimes, Israel, a real nation, is either unintelligible or a re- proach. Regimes resting on force are bound to find fault with the rich legitimizing sourc- es of Israel's nationhood." Pitted against the totalitarian regimes were the democracies of the world, which rallied to Israel's side because, in the words of the United States Am- bassador to the United Nations, who spoke out on October 21st, "it is an attack not on Zionism but on Israel. As such, it is a general assault by the majority of nations on the principles of liberal democracy, which now are found only in a dwindling number of nations." INDEED, THROUGHOUT his- tory, one of the acid tests of a liberal society has been its treatment of its Jewish minori- tv which invariably has been as a censure of the Arabs moves at the United Nations and as a dramatic endorsement of Zionism by the countries whose moral values and social order far better qualify them to pass judgment on matters relating to human rights and liberties. There can be no mistaking Arab intentions. As Israel's Am- bassador to the United Nations, Mr. Chaim Herzog, pointed out in the Third Committee on Oc- tober 16th, "the attempt now being made by certain Arab governments to strike at the very roots of Israel, by trying to denigrate Zionism, its ideo- logical basis, is nothing but ruth- less and cynical political war- fare . namely, a renewed ef- fort by the enemies of the Jew- ish people to deprive it of its homeland." IN THE SAME WAY as the Nazis sought to make the Jew an "untermensch" (a subhu- man), the Arabs are trying to render Israel an "unterstaat" (a sub- or pariah, state). As the Lebanese representative at the U.N.E.S.C.O. General Confer- ence articulated it in Paris on November 21, 1975, "Israel is a state which belongs nowhere because it comes from no- where." In embarking on this program, the Arabs have torn a page from the manual of Nazism. The de- struction of European Jewry be- gan in the same sinister way which the Arabs have now chos- en. First, the Jews were labelled a pernicious race, then they has happened is that the dis- criminatory principle has been transferred from the realm of individual rights to the domain of collective identity." The resolutions that have now been adopted by the General Assembly are the culmhiation of a series of political moves by the Arabs which led in Novem- ber 1974 to .the appearance at the General Assembly of Yas- ser Arafat, the leader of the Arab terrorist groups. Since then, a chain of events has been set in motion in vari- ous international forums. After using the Arabs built-in majori- ty to secure resolutions discrim- inating against Israel at U.N.E. S.C.O. (the United Nations Edu- cational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization), the Egyptian Foreign Minister proclaimed on March 24, 1975, "It is inevita- ble that we escablate the cam- paign of isolating and rejecting Israel from the international community and from the United Nations." THE NEXT MAJOR move was made in a somewhat un- expected quarter - the Inter- national Women's Year World Conference, held in Mexico in July under United Nations aus- pices. Againusing their auto- matic majority, the Arabs had "Zionism" written into the Con- ference's final declaration as one of the ideologies (along with colonialism, neo-colonial- ism, foreign occupation, apart- heid, and racial discrimination) which must be eliminated. WORDS CEASE TO have any "4 "Yasser Arafat: 'We shall never stop until we can go back home and Israel is destroyed. The goal of our struggle is the end of Israel . . . We don't want peace, we want victory'." .... ".'..: ...VS.V.V..'S.. .}:.:s ' :4i:"?.:.......s:" {} ; {: .":: S :4:ti. S ,'. '. *..... ...... "Chaim Herzog: 'The attempt now being made by certain Arab governments to strike at the very roots of Israel by trying to denigrate Zionism is nothing but ruthless and cynical political warfare ." ...... ...... . .... ...... .{ : : ? "r :> Sl a The Palestine Liberation Or- ganization is that loose federa- tion of Arab terror groups pur- porting to represent the Pales- tinians which through its ac- tions and use of indiscriminate terror has violated every prin- ciple of the United Nations Char- ter and every canon of interna- tional law. Its declared aim is to elimin- ate the State of Israel. This is unequivocably laid down in its Constitution, the document known as the Palestinian Na- tional Covenant. Article 9 states: "Armed struggle is the only way to lib- erate Palestine, and is, there- fore, a strategy and not a tac- tic." Article 15 states: "The libera- tion of Palestine ... is to purge the Zionist nresence from Pal- of these Arab atrocities against ethnic or religious minorities, including the Maronites of Leb- anon. GIVEN THEIR uncompromis- ing hatred for Israel, the prom- inence of Syria, Iraq, and Lib- ya in moving these resolutions was perhaps predictable. But Egypt, too, was in the forefront of this onslaught, playing an instrumental role in moving these resolutions through their various stages in the United Nations. Equally lamentable and dis- turbing, and perhaps just as re- vealing, were some remarks made by President Sadat dur- ing his recent visit to the Unit- ed States with reference to these resolutions. Justifying his coun- try's part in this campaign, be- fore the National Press Club in were divested of their political privileges, then of their econom- ic assets, then of their legal rights, then of their dignity. And, once all that was accom- plished, they were dispatched for the "final solution." This. process has already been ap- plied by the Arabs since 1948 to the Jews who used to live in their midst, and who were spared the same fate as their European brethren only because they had Israel to flee to. In endorsing the Arabs' reso- lution, the United Nations has bestowed its official sanction to anti-Semitism on a global scale. Under the euphemism of anti- Zionism, to those who may still question whether anti - Zionism and anti - Semitism are in fact identical, an answer has been meaning. Zionism is the world's oldest movement for national liberation embracing four thou- sand years of constant struggle for national expression and dig- nity. It is an aberration for any- one to attach the false label of racism to a people and a cause whose history for thousands of years has been a record of sub- jection to persecution and racial discrimination. It is the saddest of commentaries that this should have been done to a people whose history is an unbroken record of contribution to human dignity and liberty. Zionism will continue to sur- vive and flourish long after the United Nations resolutions have sunken into oblivion. The real victim of these attacks will be the United Nations organization I