4 * 4 4 ,# f Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 24, 1970 Friday, July 24, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wpi. * 1'vent bt. d' Se ws briefs; d b l, xlot axe Cr w s w e r .N a v .r+ rsti af'C' s a t tk ' N By The Associated Press SEN. ROBERT HUBER (R-TROY), has announced the final report of his special committee to investigate colleges and universities, will not be released until after the August primary. "To release the report prior to the primary would cast a shadow of possible political motivation on the report," said Huber, who is Opuosing Mrs. Leonare Romney in a bid to become the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate. Huber said the report, financed by $59,000 in state funds, will be written by a special eight-member committee. A lengthy, two- volume report detailing findings of the group which handled research for the committee was released and reported on earlier this year. U.S.-SOUTH KOREA CONFEREES have agreed to shift more planes to the Asian nation and modernize its military forces but broke up without a timetable for American troop withdrawals. Before the two-day defense meeting U.S. military officials said a timetable would be worked out for departure of one-third of the 62,000 troops in South Korea. South Korean President Chung, Hee Park, commenting on the talks, said in Seoul he is strongly opposed to troop cutbacks for four or five years. Earlier, the country's premier, Chung Il-kwon, said he and his cabinet would resign if troops were withdrawn. * * * THE SOVIET UNION JOINED yesterday in saying that Egypt, in effect, accepted the U.S. peace proposal for the Middle East. What Egypt said, in the words of President Gamal Abdel Nasser in Cairo, was that Egypt approves and accepts what the United States suggested but "we don't expect it to achieve any results be- cause of Israel's attitude and its foolishness." Secretary of State William P. Rogers had proposed for the United States that Israel and the Arab states stop shooting and start talking. Daily Classifieds Get Results Phone 764-0558 Laborer throws tear gas into Parliament during session Nutrition expert blasts cereals for containing 'empty calories' LONDON (P)-Tear gas bombs exploded yesterday in the House of Commons, smothering the ancient chamber in acrid smoke. They were hurled from the visitors gallery by a young man who cried: "Belfast. See how you like it!" Members, eyes streaming with tears, fled and the house was closed down indefinitely. Two bombs bounced and roll- ed on the floor of, the vaulted chamber, spewing clouds of dense smoke and touching off two small fires. Attendants grappled with the young man as he waved his arms and shouted. Visitors scrambled back from the struggle. The man was identified as a laborer. His angry words ap- parently referred to the tear gas used by British troops in quel- ling rioting in Belfast, capital of Northern Ireland, during the past year of feuding between Protestants and Roman Cath- olics. Iobert Mellish, chief whip of the Labor party opposition, said: "It was right under my feet,the first one. I thought it was a hand grenade. "I ran. I went like a bomb. I wasn't going to read about my bloody obituary in the Times." That first bomb squirted un- der the Labor opposition front bench. The second came near it. The twin explosion touched off a fire. Attendants nearer to the fire snuffed it out with their jackets while others carried the mace, symbol of the ancient authority of Parliament, from the cham- ber. Order papers littered the green benches of the House, just as they were discarded by MPs as they fled from the chamber. No one was hurt in the rush to get out. Even 69-year-old Dr. Horace King, speaker of the House on the dais at the front of the chamber, escaped from his seat with the help of atten- dants. Due for debate later in the day was the case of Bernadette Devlin, member from Northern Ireland now serving a six-month prison term forvrioting and in- citing riot during Catholic-Prot- estant violence. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agred by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- .gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. 1 Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier.r$5 by mail. Read and Use Daily Classifieds WASHINGTON (P) - A nutritional specialist yesterday told Senate investigators that nearly all of the most heavily advertised- dry cereals contain only empty calories that can keep people fat but not healthy. In fact, said Robert B. Choats, 40 of 60 major types of cereals he has studied have about as much nutritional value as a shot of hard liquor. This testimony by a citizen-lobbyist who runs a small Washington consulting firm sent a snap-crackle-pop through the breakfast cereal industry. Most of the big firms defended their products and some of them implied that Choate doesn't know what he is talking about. "Leading nutrition authorities in the nation just do not agree with Mr. Choate," said a spokesman for the Kellogg Co. General Foods said Choate "has made a great many technical errors" in his testimony and "has made a number of wrong assumptions about the food industry and food marketing." "These can/be corrected," General Foods said, "if and when the industry is given an opportun- ity to provide the right information to the sub- committee."- Aides of the Senate consumer subcommittee which heard Choate said the cereal makers will be given a chance to testify Aug. 4. Choate told the subcommittee iheaded by Sen. Frank Moss, (D-Utah), that "If a family likes dry cereals and can afford them, there are several with respectable nutritional content." "But," he said, "it is apparent in this first of several food industry analyses that we humans are viewed not as beings to be nourished but as suckers tb be sold." Choate said a frequent defense of the dry cereal makers takes the form of describing a certain cereal's nutrient value in combination with the milk and sugar it is supposed to be eaten with. But he said his studies showed that those cer- eals he ranked in the bottom 40 would fail as a complete meal even if the amount of cereal was doubled. A consultant to the White House, the Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare, and congressional committees, Choate said his analysis showed cereals to be primarily a calorie source. He said the nutrient value of 4 of the 60 are so low "as to remind this observer of the term 'empty calories,' a term thus far applied to al- cohol and sugar." "Calories," he added, "are a measure of the energy volume of food, but food must contain more than calories if one is to remain healthy." }I MICHIGAN REPERTORY1X70f --uniYersity players-- r TONIGHT shakespeare THE MERCHANT OF VENICE WASHINGTON NUTRITIONAL tells a Senate consumer subcomm most heavily advertised cereals Choate's testimony included char vision ads. 1 ......_...__....- Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Air Conditioned 8:00 p.m. Ph: 668-6300 rV 'q 1214 S. UNIVERSITY DIAL 668-6416 SHOWS AT: THURS. AND FRI. 7:20 ONLY SAT. AND SUN. 1:00-4:15-9:20 WHEN TWO PEOPLE ! OVE, ONE ALWAYS LOVES MORE WHEN YOU'RE YOUNG, EVERYTHING IS NOT ENOUGH MORE! 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