The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 18, 1978-Page 15 Warning: Living may be hazardous to your health By The Associated Press Read the Warning: Living can be hazardous to tells you your health. cause can Or so it seems. If you believe Off to everything you read and hear, it is hard automobil to imagine how anyone survives. seat belt f Consider just a few of the dangers National lurking in a typical day. cent of all WAKE UP WITH a cup of coffee. But 25 miles o too much caffeine is bad for you. It Safe at causes birth defects in animals, some million Ar researchers say. And who can afford cancer-ca coffee anyway? work, ac( Take a vitamin. Careful. Thousands stitute of of cases of vitamin poisoning are repor- Health., ted every year, according to the workers f National Clearinghouse for Poison Con- everythin trol Centers of the Food and Drug Ad- other pol ministratin (FDA). 2,000 chem Bacon and eggs for breakfast. Do not as cancer take safety for granted. The gover- nment wants to sharply reduce the NERVO amount of sodium nitrite used to cure with sugar bacon because nitrite can combine with Lunch t other substances to form cancer- President causing agents. "Bacon," says Michael Anyway,] Jacobson, of the Center for Science in time, can the Public Interest, "is nothing but lit- heart, say tie strips of fat laced with nitrosamines. Abuse. The fat produces heart disease, You mig America's No. 1 health problem, the nitrosamines promote cancer, the No. 2 Time fo health problem." oven. Un! JUST EGGS, then. Whites only. Egg leaking ex AP Photo yolks contain cholesterol and high Give up levels of cholesterol are bad for your As you orgetown heart. statistic. ents drop A quick cigarette before showering. when we k are then Remember the cancer warnings! the aver, OK, there is nothing wrong with United Sta cleanliness, is there? Only sometimes. to the Cen The FDA wants warning labels on bub- than 70 ye ble baths because, it says, some who use them get rashes and itching. . BE CAREFUL stepping into the tub. Twenty-one million Americans are in- jured in home accidents every year, - says the Consumer Product Safety Commission. And if the water is too hot, Mr ffed to the you may waste energy.S* m We Back in the bedroom to dress. Stop So -am Weissbefore you spray. Aerosol products con- e are here taining chlorofluorocarbons may be e policyrif damaging the earth's atmosphere and tinues, we the government has taken steps to ban the White them. Perhaps you are female. On the Pill. required warning label that excess doses of estrogen can cer. work. Careful of that le. Does it pollute? Is your astened? Drive carefully. The Safety Council says 72.3 per fatal accidents happen within f home. the office. Safe? Nearly one mericans may be exposed to using substances where they cording to the National In- f Occupational Safety and An additional 20 million face possible dangers from g from asbestos to noise and lutants. Between 1,500 and nicals are known or suspected causing agents. US? TRY chewing gum. Not r; that can cause cavities. ime. Skip the three martinis. Carter does not approve. lots of alcohol, over a long damage the liver, brain and s the National Center on Drug ht as well go home. r dinner. Use the microwave Less it has been found to be cessive radiation. and go to bed. drift off, ponder one more It may cheer you: In 1900, knew of none of these dangers, age life expectancy in the ates was 47.3 years, according sus Bureau. Today, it is more ars. Keeping cool Where do tired, old refrigerators go to rest? To this back street at Ge University, apparently. Actually, this is the spot where Georgetown stud off the rented iceboxes at the end of the school year. The refrigerators carted off for storage until next semester. Rabbis protest U.S arms sale WASHINGTON (AP) Seven rabbis from New York chained themselves to the iron fence in front of the White House yesterday to protest the Carter administration's sale of jet fighters to Egypt andSaudi Arabia. They spent about 75 minutes in front of the Executive Mansion before unlocking the handcuffs and moving to Capitol Bill. An eighth rabbi, without handcuffs, sat in front of the White Bouse with them. THE EIGHT protesters remained there for more than an hour while police watched them but took no action to remove them. About 2,000 demonstrators suppor- ting the rabbis massed on the broad sidewalk of Pennsylvania Avenue and across the street in Lafayette Park, chanting Hebrew prayers and singing the Israeli national anthem and Israeli folk songs. At one point more than a 'dozen District of Columbia police officers stepped between the rabbis and their supporters, using their nightsticks to push the crowd back. No injuries were apparent. THE POLICE line blocked the sup- porters, reporters and photographers from viewing the rabbis, but the of- ficers eventually stepped away. The police permitted one memnber of the group to hand a bullhorn to one of.- the 'abbis when -another bullhorn the4 rabbi was using began tofail'- ' to ArabQ With his right wrist handcu six-foot-high fence, Rabbi Avr of the Bronx, N.Y., said, "WE to tell the President that if th eroding support for Israel con will come back and circle House. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents of AUD. A Thursday, May 18 RED RIVER (Howard Hawks, 1948) 7 ONLY-AUD. A In the seasonal critical fights about the 10 Greatest Westerns," this film is near the top of most lists. JOHN WAYNE (before he became vapidly heroic) gives one of his best performances as a monomaniacal rancher determined to get his herd to the railroad at the cost of any life, in the first cattle drive up the Chisholm Trail. Hints of Captain Bligh here, with MONTGOMERY CLIFT as a sexually aggressive Mr. Christian. Spectacle (over 6,000 cattle were used in the shooting), great photography, super action, and a mind-blowing climax. With WALTER BRENNAN, HARRY CAREY, NOAH BEERY, JR., JOANNE DRU. RIO BRAVO (Howard Hawks, 1959) 9:15-AUD. A A sheriff, a drunk, a cripple, and a kid try to keep a killer in foil against the attacks of the killer's brother and a small army. A classic western and a triumph for Hawks who transforms a standard plot into the kind of movie that wins fans. JOHN WAYNE, WALTER.BRENNAN, WARD BOND (the Ford & Hawks repertory company), with ANGIE DICKINSON and RICKY NELSON looking tough. Screenplay by Jules Furthmon and Leigh Brackett (THE BIG SLEEP). Tomorrow: "And Now for Soqiphing Completely Different" A 'Quacksor Fortune KHsdppusin in the Bronx"