THE Summer Daily Summer Edition of TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, May 15, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 Meat standards lose in court THE FEDERAL government may not have heart, but it apparently doesn't care if we do-have heart that Is; along with animal udders, lips, ears, lungs, and snouts in our sausage products. The Supreme Court yesterday, in a victory for the meatpackers, declined to hear an appeal from state At- torney General Frank Kelley to allow Michigan to en- force stiffer meat processing regulations than those al- lowed by federal laws. While we see this action as con- stitutionally correct, it can only serve to slow down fed- eral initiative to revamp its present meat processing laws. Michigan has had a tough meat processing law in effect since 1952. Recently however, the Sixth U. S. Cir- cuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati, in reviewing a suit started by three meatnackers, declared that 1967's Fed- eral Wholesale Meat Act, though setting standards gen- erally more lenient than Michigan's, must, under the Constitution. prevail over state law. HOWEVER, THE federal law's priority over a state law does not necessarily make it the better law. Michi- gan's mest nrncessine laws do not permit the use of the heart, toneP. liver, cracklines, stomach, lungs, esopha- gus, udder. lins. ears or snouts of cattle, sheep, swine, and goats in sasae- the federal law does. Michian laws had set a minimal protein content for meat prodets at 12 per cent. The federal law sets no minimum reairement Furthermore, it permits up to 15 per cent of poultrv products in cooked smoked sau- sage, alon with cereal. sova binders, and certain milk derivatives all of which were forbidden under the state laws. In Decemher of last year, the U. S. Agriculture De- partment proposed bringing federal standards into line with those of Michigan. Six monthe later, we find that no action has been taken on this proposal. Considering the cost involved in producing higher quality meats, along with the administration's concerted attempt to hold down farm prices, we find it unlikely that the Agriculture Department will be prompted at this time to pass new and stricter regulations, which while in- creasing nutritional values would also increase prices. UNFORTUNATELY, yesterday's Supreme Court action will only ease the pressure on the government. co 1 oo't 6 5 c O25d ~ { g t - o The fall of John Mitchell; the irony of Nixon's America IT JUST DOESN'T pay to be a right-thinking American any- Its really tough - especially just when it seemed Richard Nixon had the nation "back on the right track" so to speak. Millions of Americans who voted for the Pres- ident had a right to expect better than this. Oh, John Mitchell, why hast thou forsaken us? C11rs parks Mr. Mitchell, you will remember, was just another municipal bonds lawyer when, in 1969, his g o o d friend Dick Nixon named him to replace Attorney General Ramsey Clark and restore respect for the law in the justice department. Losing no time, Mitchell quick- ly indicted eight of Ameriza's most dangerots and disrespectful radicals on charges of conspiring to incite riots at the 1968 Demo- tratic National Convention . AH, THOSE WERE the heydays if law and order. John Mitchell was riding high in Washington. Stern, forbidding almost paternal, he would teach right from wrong to those who would not heed the dictates of American ethics and values. While, on the other hand, radi- cals like Bobby Seale were in their place - bound and gagged in a Chicago courtroom, facing zertain onviction with a string of other indictments on hand in case he managed to wriggle tnrosugh the government's fingers on this one. It was, after all, as it should be. John Mitchell was the nroto- type, solid, four-square American ("Cood field, mmicioal bonds"). Seale was a trouble-maker, a screaming radical too lazy to even look for his bootstraps to s a y nothing of puling himself up by them. BUT WHERE IS John Michell now? Where is the ni who, shoulder to shoulder with I i c k Nixon, formed the first 'in i ofde- tense for decent Americ n 'alues against the onslaught of her carp- ing detractors? John Mitchell now stanls in a New York courtroom indicted on several counts of conspira:y to de- fraud the United States and ob- struct justice in the matter relat- ing to the $200,000 campaign con- tributions of securities wizordl o- bert L. "Light Fingers" Vesco. And if he wriggles through t io e government's fingers on thisone, he will probably face a strin of indictments as a result of the Watergate bugging investigatio I. AND WHAT OF Bobby Seale, the man Mitchell sought to 'pro- secute as an example to wrong thinkers everywhere? Seale is now runniag for uayor of his home town - 'laklal - and BOBBY SEALE - Former troublemaker is now running for mayor of Oakland, Cal., and is doing quite well. by all accounts, he is citigrather bwell. In fact, in a recent speech his Republican opponent referrel to him as "a fine American." And Seale is selling himself in a way that would warm the heart of the staunchest Germano-Cali- fornian ad men in the Nixon ad- ministration. 'The system is like ta razotr blade," he told an audience re- cently. "If you put new metal con- tent into the blade, you set six or seven shaves instead of two. So let's put some new content into the system so we can get a better shave and a better life." (One can just picture Disneyland ad-man turned press secretary, Ronald "no comment" Ziegler, sit- ting at a board meeting stroking his chin and musing, "The system is like a razor blade, huh . . I think you've got something there, Bobby.) SO WHAT does it all mean? Probably not much. Except that self-righteousness is a dangerous game because someday, somebody may find out you're as much of a crook as the next man. Everyone's time comes, event- ually. "OH, JOHN MITCHELL, why hast thou forsaken us?" D.C. jobs unsteady By DICK WEST 'THE SENATE Judiciary Commit- tee has been holding hearings on the nomination of Elliott Richard- son, former secretary of health, education and welfare and present secretary of defense, to be the fu- ture attorney general. After one of the sessions a col- league turned to me and said, "I wonder why Richardson can't keep a steady job?" "I dunno," I said. "I was just wondering 'the same thing about Schlesinger."V The reference was to James R. Schlesinger, director of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency and the former chairman of -the Atomic Energy Commission who has now been nominated to head the De- fense Department. IN THE OLD days, tramp print- ers and other workers who drifted from job to job usually were re- garded as shiftless malcontents, or at least lacking in stick-to-itive- ness. "You'll never get ahead that way," other people would t e l"1 them. "Nobody wants to hire some- one who barely hangs around long enough to learn the ropes." But President Nixon apparently has no compunctions against hiring itinerants. Richardson is switching to t h e Justice Department after o n I y being at the Pentagon long enough to hear the orientation lecture and see the VD movie. And Schlesing- er had hardly been with the CIA long enough to get measured for a cloak and sign up for dagger prac- tice. Yet Nixon hired them as readily as he would someone who was practically married to his job. JOHN CONNALLY is another new employe who seems to have trou- ble sticking to one job. He tried his hand as Navy secretary for a while, you'll recall, and later stay- ed on at the Treasury Department at least long enough to hang up his hat. Now he's taken a part-time sum- mer job at the White House. I don't know how he got it but I assume he enrolled in one of those intern programs. Not that there haven't always been government officials with vagabond shoes and ants in their pants who thoimght the grass looked greener in the other pas- ture. I remember Arthur Goldberg coming here as the Johnson ad- ministration's Labor secretary and then flitting about to the Supreme Court and United Nations. He nev- er could settle down, that fellow. BUT RICHARDSON and Schles- inger appear to be part of a new breed of transitory public servants. One more job swap and they'll be included in the Migratory Labor Act. Disk 'it is a triter for United Press International. Watergate hasn't exactly humbled the administration, has it?'