Moving in on Mami-militantly. By DANIEL BERRIGAN LET'S SEE. In '72, if elected Nixon will become our Lead- er for the 200th anniversary of the American Revolution. George Washington to Richard Nixon, Jefferson to Mitchell, Hamilton to Agnew. Also Valley Forge to My Lai. We've come a long way. Some of us would like to show how far we've come. We want to show Nixon and Agnew a n d Kleindeinst what a bloody road they've led us down - the bloody road from Hanoi to Sai- gon to Attica. DailyG es rer That's why we're renaming Florida's Highway One (the road that leads to the Convention Hall in Miami.) We're taking o u r cue from Vietnam where the French Soldiers renamed High- way One; they called it "The Street Without Joy." FOR ONE DAY, August 22, the day of Nixon's nomination at the Republican convention, we're going to take all the joy out of traveling down Highway One in Florida. We're going to make it a Street Without Joy; for Nixon, for Agnew, for all their followers and oil millionaires and fellow racists and Delegates to the Death Game; for all their manufacturers of murder, for all their anti-personnel pimps. We're going to take the joy out of Nixon's death game. We're going to line Highway One with admissable evidence against war criminals. We're going to turn the Florida noon into moonlight and make them drive through. their own grave yard. We're go- ing to open a drawer in the Na- tional Morgue, pull back the sheet, and push their faces into their own four-square product: death by air, death by water, death by land, death by fire. HERE'S THE PLAN. We will crowd the Street Without J o y with artifacts, services, products, consumer items, foreign aid - everything they've dumped on innocent southeast Asians during all the years of Our Longest and Most Honorable and Patriotic Foreign Incursion. We will show them their crim- es. Or at least we may keep them from wasting another billion bucks on wasting another million Vietnamese. A 10 mile stretch of pure an- ger, soul, compassion, chutzpah, fury, truth. A final judgement on their works and pomps. You name it; or better still help us make the name come true. FRIENDS, SOME of us have had it. Some of us have had it for years. In '68, inspired by ano- ther Bomber In a High Place, my friends, my brothes, and I destroyed hunting licesses in Ca- tonsville, Maryland. We went on trial, we went underground, we went to prison. It's '72; some of us are at large again. To face what? More and more and more and more of the same. Another Re- spectable Bomber is showing his capacity to occupy the H i g h Place. By bombing more fervent- ly than ever we bombed before. AND THE Demented Delegat- es want him back. They've set the day and hour of the nom- ination - a cynical charade of everything decent, everything real about our elective process. They're coming to Miami in a ments of Peace and Plenty, Laird and Rogers. Also the infectious Chiefs of Staph, General Motors, General Foods, General Electric . .. And of course, and at length, and above and before all - Kis- singer. In '68, nine of us were con- demned in the courts for burn- ing in public those sacred gov- ernment properties, the draft files. We were protesting, you may remember, the burning of children. BUT WHOSE fingers, w h o s e hands, whose shoulders, w h o s e bodies, will stop the bombing of the dikes? We need a v e r y flood, an outpouring of people, a new outcry, as the Mad Hat- ters assemble to approve ever new crimes; the destruction of dikes, the seeding of rain clouds - and what more, and what worse, in 4 more years? Come to Miami, say NO with us, loud and clear. Daniel Berrigan is a Catholic priest and an anti-war activist who was recently acquitted on conspiracy charges to kidnap Ienry Kissinger. Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Ma r y Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted. few days. They're'coming to pull it all down; to destroy w h a t Washington built, to betray what Lincoln gave his life for, to de- ride what Americans love and cherish; our country, our people, our hope, our good name among other nations. They've come to Miami to fin- ish the next volume of the Pen- -tagon Papers; authors - Nixon, Agnew, Mitchell, and that admif- able cutlass crew of the Depart- ONE COULD go on and on. But the situation can be summed up neatly. If the convention pro- ceeds unchallenged, if no one says NO, if Nixon makes it again, millions more Vietnamese will die, and thousands more Amer- icans, and uncounted other peo- ple who get in the way of our leaders pique and pride. If he makes it, many of us will also be back in prison. Who's got union lettuce? By RALPH VARTABEDIAN 'WHEY THOUGHT they would be sleeping easier after the grape boycott was over. All day long they watched those young people driv- ing away customers outside their doors. The kids were talking about- Cesar somebody or another; and the police couldn't take them away. Ann Arbor grocery store man- agers are in for another hell of a time as local organizers for the United Farm Workers (UFW) plan the strategy that they hope will kill sales of non-union California iceburg lettuce. Locally, union picked lettuce is at a premium. An informal survey of ten nearby grocery stores shows that only one grocery store car- ries union lettuce. Also, it reveals that store managers are painfully unaware of the existence and is- sues concerning the lettuce boy- cott. THE SURVEY included Kroger (both stores), A&P (both stores), Great Scott, Soybean Cellar, Eden's market, Wrigley's market, Meier's market, and White market. Great Scott is the only store car- rying California UFW lettuce. Sev- eral other stores carry locally grown lettuce, not under the action of the boycott. The Kroger grocery store on Broadway was found to be selling California Teamster lettuce, con- sidered to be "scab" merchandise by the UFW. The manager says, "Well, you know people talk about big business these days - unions are the biggest business of them all. They handle more money than General Motors." The Wrigley's store in the Maple Village Shopping Center was re- cently selling lettuce not bearing the UFW emblem. The manager explains, "That bunch of garbage (lettuce). Hell, California wouldn't even put their label on that stuff. That's locally grown." AT THE A&P grocery store also in Maple Village, the store man- ager claims that the lettuce on display was union lettuce. Asked why the wrappings did not dis- play any union labels, he said the certification- was printed on t h e cartons. When asked to produce business tycoons to recognize the UFW at the main bargaining agent for lettuce pickers. FARM WORKERS are currently some of the lowest paid laborers in the nation, not even covered by $1.60 per hour minimum wage law. The national average hourly rate for farm workers stands at a min- iscule $1.43 per hour, without. any sort of fringe benefits. The UFW is demandingda wage rate of $1t90 per hoor, and fringe benefits including health care, overtime pay for work on holidays, death benefit insurance, and a 72 hour maximum work week. The boycott is expected to exert pressures on California and Ari- zona lettuce growers, the target of union organizing efforts. Near- ly 90 per cent of the nation's head lettuce is grown in those two states. CURRENTLY, some ten per cent of head lettuce is picked by union organized farm laborers. - The UFW advises that shoppers look for the UFW emblem to ver- ify that lettuce is union picked. If the wrappings carry no labels, ask the manage -to display the ship- ping cartons. If the grocery store in question is actually carrying un- ion lettuce, they should have no qualms about proving it. Get involved- write your reps ! Sen. Philip Hart (Dem), Rm. 253, Old Senate Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep), Rm. 353 Old Senate Bldg., Cap- itol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Rep. Marvin Esch (Rep), Rm. 112, Cannon Bldg. Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Gilbert.Bursly (Rep), Senate, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, 48933. Rep. Raymond Smith (Rep), House of Representatives, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, 48933. 94V t tatn Daily Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, AUG. 9, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 RALPH NADER Take GM10 court 4 DULL LETTER with exciting possibilities for consumers was delivered privately a few days ago by the General Account- ing Office (GAO) to the Federal Trade Commission - the agency that is supposed to protect consumers and fight monopolies. The GAO, a Congressional watchdog over federal expenditures, ad- vised the FTC that it had the authority t6 pay certain expenses of participants in its proceedings who cannot afford to bear these costs. This opinion clears the way for the FTC and other regulatory agencies to adopt a policy of facilitating citizen initiatives or intervention in the consumer, health and safety issues which have all too often been decided in favor of business lobbyists. Although the GAO letter advised the FTC that an intervening citizen's witness fees and costs, transcript charges and traveling expenses may be reimbursed by the Commission, the real importance of the opinion is to clear away legal hurdles for the Commission to exer- cise even broader "administrative discretion." Presumably, this discretion could extend to providing legal services similar to what is now provided by the state for poor people facing court trials. FEDERAL REGULATORY agencies make decisions affecting electric, telephone and energy prices, consumer frauds and de- ception, and defects and other hazards of consumer products from autos to food. But their mystifying procedures are known largely to those special interests who can hire specialized lawyers and pay the costs to negotiate the legal labyrinths. , In practice, this has meant over the years that only those who are well-heeled could afford to fight for their interests. Con- sequently, corporations have had the field pretty much to them- selves and it, indeed, has been a field day. Now two questions should be asked: Will the FTC issue guide- lines which comprehensively open its doors to those without re- sources who wish to secure justice, or will it confine the GAO opinion to the Firestone case? And, secondly, how will other agencies, such as the Federal Power Commission, the Interstate Commerce Commission, the Atomic Energy Commission, the Food and Drug Administration, react? Will they ignore the door opened by the GAO or will they help launch a major abolition of the fin- ancial obstacles that make most Americans less equal than a priv- ileged few? IT IS IN the interest of all citizens to make sure that the answers are not left entirely to the bureaucrats. (e) 1972, Harrison-Blaine of New Jersey, Inc. one of the boxes. he replied "They have all been fed into our carton shredder." Eden's Market, an organic food store, has a novel approach to the problem. They no longer sell let- tuce. The manager said "We stop- ped carrying lettuce because peo- ple wouldn't buy it unless it was individually wrapped. I just don't know where people's heads are at." The UFW, an insurgent union headed by Cesar Chavez, is con- ducting a nation wide boycott of nonunion California grown head let- tuce in an effort to force agri- Today's Staff . . . News: Jim Kentch, Alan Lenhoff, Chris Parks Editorial Page: Carla Rapoport Photo Technician: Denny Gainer