Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Thursday, August 22, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 Rocky's show: The Devil and Mason Williams SURELY THERE MUST have been an alternative to Nel- son Rockefeller. The mildest word that can be used to describe one's emotions at his selection to become our newest Vice President is disappointment. Nelson Rockefeller's is a face that is depressingly familiar to people who have been following the political scene for the last fifteen years. He has been one of the more persistent of Republican politicians, having tried for the GOP presidential nomination three times, in the process picking up a reputation as the Richard Nixon of the Republican left. Rockefeller has been a militant moderate throughout his career, a political stance that has allowed him to come out on whatever side of an issue appeared to be the most popular one. He both supported and opposed the Vietnam War. depending on what stance seemed to be the better vote-getter, and sometimes did both simul- taneously. He has had two main qualifications for the Presi- dency during his many tries for the office: one, he has been, for longer than anyone cares to remember, the Gov- ernor of New York. a nosition that has been traditionally a springboard to higher office: and two, a seemingly lim- itless supply of monev from the family fortune. A S GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK, Rockefeller did as lit- tle as nosihe. relving on his financial resources and the inentitude of the New York Democrats to stay in power. He continned the traditional Republican policy of treating New York and the other cities of his realm as colonies to be exnloited for the good of the suburbs and rural districts. As a man who tas everything, he has stayed immune to blandishments of those who would buy influence, since he has no need for their money. His fortune has also allowed him to mont uresidential campaigns when no one in their rieht mind would finance him. Since Rockefeller has been a governor, he can claim some exnertise in domestic affairs, however faulty the claim may be. But his ignorance of foreign affairs is abysmal, consistine of a few good-will trips abroad. When forced to discuss issues, Rockefeller has always deflected talk away from foreign affairs. All in all, Nelson Rockefeller is about as qualified as Johnnv Orr for the highest office in the land, Were he the governor of a small state, and of modest means, he would never have emerged from obscurity. RUT ROCKEFELLER SHOULD NOT be disqualified for the Vice Presidency on those grounds alone. Idiots have occupied the Vice Presidency before, and doubtless will do so again. It is on moral grounds that Nelson Rockefeller should be rejected. Though many have forgotten, it was not too long ago that the inmates of Attica Prison staged a rebellion in protest of the inhuman conditions they were forced to endure. Hostages were taken, and a set of demands pre- sented to the authorities Their official response was to stage an armed assault on the prison during which 37 people, both inmates and hostages, were killed by police guns. Attica is an outpost of the New York State Correc- tional system. And the man who ordered the assault on Attica was Nelson Rockefeller. Rockefeller may try to hide it beneath moderate platitudes and inane campaign songs like Mason Wil- liams' "Cinderellah Rockefellah", but the fact remains that the Murderer of Attica has morally disqualified him- self from any position of leadership, let alone the Presi- dency. Congress should remember this when they vote on confirmation. One Nixon is enough. -JOHN KAHLER Summer Staff JUDY RUSKIN Editor MARNIE REYN Editorial Director KEN FINK ArtsEditor GORDON A TCHESON .. . . . . . ..... . ....... ... Night Editor CHERYL PILATE ................... .......... .... Night Editor JEFF SORENSEN .. . .................................... Night Editor BARBARA CORNELL A........................ ....... Asst. Night Editor DELLA DIPIETRO ........................,.......... Ass't. Night Editor BILL HEENAN ......................................... Asst Night Editor ANDREA LILLY ...................................... Asst. Night Editor STEPHEN HERSH ..,... . . . ..Asst. Night Editor DAVID WHITING......... ...,..........Asst. Night Editor KEN FINK ............................. ................ Photographer STEVE KAGAN .........Photographer WHO EATS? "The Fat get fat and the Thin get scurvy... By ALAN MILLER to the total world granary, though limits on fer- tilizer and technology available to producer na- TiS YEAR, worldwide, 20 million people will ions kept outputs often disappointing. starve to death, according to United Nations Bat increased demand, both from the growing statistics. More than one-third of all people alive po,lation and the appetites of the wealthy today suffer chronic malnutrition. Even with re- world's livestock, has wiped out these gains. The ductions in infant mortality, 650 million of the billion people in the developed nations use as one billion children in the hungry nations of the -pep leain to feed their livestock as the world todaynwillfneverreach adulthood.asntth world today will never reach adulthood. In the two billion in the low income nations use directly words of a leading nutrition expert, "To all these as food. The food that today feeds 210 million children, life is nothing more than a vigil o Americans would feel 1.5 billion at the consump- death." . tion level of China. Seventeen countries in Africa's Sahel area, A TYPICAL American consumes 2200 pounds south of the Sahara desert, are devastated by a of grain each year, primarily in the form of beef severe drought and consequent famine. A British and other meat products; the average Asian Development Minister estimates five million peo- eats less than 400 pounds. The pattern is the same ple in the Sahel face starvation; UN Secre- with other foods. One-third of the world's pop- tary General Waldheim says that twice that num- ulation in the developed countries consumes two- her will die. Chronic food shortages in India, thirds of the world's food supplies - including Bangladesh, Indonesia, and scores of other coon- 80 per cent of the milk, meat, and eggs, and tries are causing political and social unrest. Re- 75 per cent of all protein. The Netherlands in cently, the governments of Niger and Ethiopia 1970 imported more milk solids to feed its veal fell, with the drought a factor in both countries, that was imported by all the underdeveloped na- WEST GERMAN Foreign Minister Scheel told tions put together. the United Nations, "Things cannot go on like Although the output of the world's fisheries has this. No one with a clear head and a feeling trebled since 1950, half of the marine harvest heart should still be able to sleep calmly - . - is now used as fish meal to feed hogs, cattle we are stumbling in the dark." and poultry in the developed nations. But tragic 'as it is, famine is only the spotlight A report prepared for the United Nations Con- on the stage of the world's food problem. Of ference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) more basic concern to the 2 billion "have nots" predicted that the "largest and poorest" develop- is chronic hunger and starvation, and a contin- ing countries would suffer most from inflation, uing competition for food supplies to be bought Ind a "serious deterioration in levels of food with limited resources from richer nations. consumption" could result. The poor nations also have to compete with the ON THE OTHER hand, the richer nations who "haves". Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.), in a dominate the world market system's pricing and Senate speech this April, criticized, ". . . the distribution patterns fare quite well. Another re- competition for food in the last two years be- cent UN study, by the Secretary General, sur- tween the developed and relatively affluent coun- veyed 64 basic commodities of world trade. tries . . . and the poor, developing countries." "On the whole," it concluded, "the prices of "To speak only of the drought that is killing commodities that are exported mainly by the human beings by the thousands in the African developing countries apparently rose less than Sahelian regions," comments Algerian President those of primary commodities [exported by] de- Boumedienne, "one might recall that in order veloped countries. This is especially striking in to meet their wheat needs these regions would the case of foodstuffs." have managed with one-twentieth the amount of Both long-range starvation and acute famine wheat that the [developed] countries use each are less the result of inadequate food supplies year to feed their cattle." than of mal-distribution of the globe's agricul- THE REALITY of increasing global hunger ap- tural resources. In blunt terms, food is avail- pears to be contradicted by progress in world able to those who have the means to buy it. In- food production over the last 25 years. Cereal come, particularly in the present world inflation- output, which provides 85 per cent of the protein ary spiral, determines who shall live and who intake of most of the world's people, has in- shall die. creased 73 per cent during this period, while population rose "only" 495 per cent. New hy- brid "miracle" grains and increased production from the "Green Revolution" have added much Alan Miller teaches in the College of Natural Resources at the University of California, Berke- ley. Copyright, Pacific News Service, 1974. Letters to the Daily Council To The Daily: AFTER READING your ar- tncle July 23 about City Coun- cil kiling this year's Blues and Jazz Festival, I just had to write you. This city is really f--d! The Republicans in City Council are tryingtto kill all the cultural, student, street-people oriented activities that makes Ann Arbor a cool place to live. First, they try to kill the Free Concerts by not funding them, and charging a "police pra'ecsion fee", when the real protection, traffic direction, drug help, cleanup, keeping order, etc., is done by the Psychedelic Rang- ers. These concerts draw peo- pie from miles away; I knot- I was picked up hitchhiking to the concert by two dudes frim Toledo; and the concerts pro- vide entertainment for thrus- ands every Sunday. Next, they try to quash the "Free" Art Fair, by forbidding concerts on Wednesday a n d Thursday because it would "dis- turb the peace", and by, for no apparent reason, closing the fair 5 hours early on Saturday -no music, no booths, no Lair. Now it's the Blues and Jazz Festival. Granted, trash is a hassle, but the Rainbow Multi- media (the Sponsors) offe'ed a $5,0000 grant to assure the site would be left clean. NOT TO mention other things the council has done to "bane- fit" the city. Why is it that an old, established restaurant takes second place and a new res- taurant with a little green in his jeans gets top priority? Why did Bicycle Jim's not e'ven have to wait for a liquor li- cense, while the Brown J a g waited three years, and oher restaurants are still waiting? The things that make Ann Arbor a nice place for students and other young people are be- ing suppressed by a messed tsp Republican controlled C i t y Council. Next election, KICK THE BASTARDS OUT! -Karen