4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, January 11, 1985 The Michigan Doily 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Facing the African famine Vol. XCV, No. 83 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Book wars F or those of you who haven't heard there is a new bookstore in town -the Michigan Union Bookstore operated by the New York firm of Bar- nes and Noble. Like any business breaking into a competitive market, the union bookstore has beveloped a strategy for survival. Barnes and Noble hopes to use its strategic location in the newly renovated Michigan Union basement to draw students away from the well- established competition. The new kid on the block has quite a task on its han- ds, though. When it comes to bookstores in Ann Arbor, two's com- pany, but three's a crowd. Hopefully, however, adding another textbook competitor to the market will result in lower prices for students during book rush. Competition for the student book market has a history of weeding out those stores which can't stand the heat. This natural selection process forced the well-established Follett's Bookstore out of the textbook market in 1982. Survival of the fittest and, more importantly, survival of the cheapest is the law by which Ann Ar- bor textbook retailers must abide. Of course, history doesn't always repeat itself , and only the outcome of the en- suing book rush will determine whether the new store has earned a postion in the textbook market. The Union is obviously a convenient location for a bookstore. The Barnes and Noble management decided at fir- st that the store's convenience - at the center of a frozen campus - would be enough to entice students into paying higher prices during bookrush. But the new store quickly felt the heat of com- petition. Now that all the bookstores in town have done their preliminary price-snooping, the Union bookstore has decided to follow suit with lower prices. A good book war is just what Ann Arbor needs. Student preferences may play a role in the future success of the "big three". While Ulrich's and the Union send their hired hands to the stacks to get your books, U-Cellar lets you rummage through the shelves on your own. Whatever the service, though, if the prices stay competitive, the stage s set for a battle. By Susan Krohn Disaster in Ethiopia may prove to be a modern-day "shot heard around the world." Certainly man countries are offering emergency aid, though belatedly. Yet this beleaguered nation's- recovery and future subsistence even now require world-wide at- tention, for Ethiopia's government found it- self unable to forestall impending tragedy, and was paralyzed by the stunning impact of its arrival. In the United States too, we were shocked while formerly comparatively casual about endemic world hunger. Recently we read of possible high- technology solutions to shortages of water supply.hWhile water is essential to viability, total hunger has multitudinous causes, all traceable to high population density on marginal lands. Thus exporting high- technology to third world nations is not unlike sending them food-stuffs: useful, humane, necessary and insufficient. Comprehen- sively, family planning must be provided even as food and water are supplied by good neighbors around the world. By whatever means we may try to make even renewable earth resources available to ever-burgeoning populations, dislocations of supply will reproduce the agony of Ethiopia if unlimited human reproduction persists. Nature's own planning, starvation, is what we helplessly witnessed, helped to limit, and now seek to prevent in the future. Barbaric and revolting, this form of population control must be supplanted by civilized balancing of nation's burdens of mankind to their sustainable resources, both human and material. Small islands as Great Britain and Japan do comparatively well because of the strength of their people as producers in the industrial world. Large countries as China find that their numbers can be contained by means short of wide-spread famine. Requirements for balance of the world's people with respect to Earth's capacity to be their gracious host are illuminated by distinguished authors. Edward Wilson, writing in Biophilia, has conservatively estimated that the current extinction rate of plants and animals is one thousand species a year, mostly from the destruction of key habitats. By 1990, extinction will overtake more then ten thousand species a year (one species per hour). In the next thirty years, one million species could be erased. At the very least, business and aid groups should make environmental impact studies on the areas of proposed projects. We, as a species have the power to eradicate the habitats and thereby the lives of all other creatures. Care must be taken to preserve other kinds as we are dependent on them to preserve our own. Sixty percent of our discoveries of medicines have been derived from plants. Ethiopia itself has lost four-fifths of its original forests. It was only through a rust-resistant strain of coffee discovered in the germ plasm of Ethiopian forests that Brazilian coffee was saved. Thus Americans were spared the one dollar cup of coffee. For many more important reasons, plants and animals of the world should be left to their own ranges. In facing famine, there are more problems under the surface than the simple problems of food. William and Paul Paddock reported in Famine 1975 that technological fixes offer a quick but false hope and have not been satisfactory in the long run. A multitude of problems faces the recipient countries as well as their benefactors, not the least of which are financial. Using past famines as indicators, we find a moderate-sized group of private organizations or businesses benefitting, via investment, from famines at increasing bur- den to taxpayers of donor countries. These authors state that advances for poor nations "have been extended principally in long-term low-interest loans. The result is a rapidly growing loan burden which is already beyond the abilities of most of these nations. The necessity for the company to make a profit, even a minor one, in an altruistic program I E 4 Associated Press This Ethiopian desert represents an ecological problem at the heart of the famine in Africa. No beards, no unions O nce again the Reagan administration has shown its insensitivity to the concerns of organized labor. Last week, its commitee overseeing the inauguial festvities purchased an ad in the trade publication Backstage which called for 200 "non-union musical theater performers" There is no firm business reason for the commitee to have wanted only non- union employees. Rather, the call is indicative of the Reagan ad- ministration's consistent attempts to undermine organized labor's effec- tiveness. Throughout Reagan's first term, the National Labor Relations Board has frequently delivered anti-union decisions on matters such as the flight of industry from unionized areas. Also, during the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Strike in 1981, Reagan authorized the use of military person- nel to serve as strike breakers. The union lost the strike and was sub- sequently dissolved. But the inauguration incident has its own ironic characteristics which make it stand out from Reagan's past labor slights. For one, Reagan himself was president of the Screen Actors Guild, the union most affected by the call for non-union actors. It seems patently ironic that his administration would be trying to undercut the union that he directed from 1949 to 1960. For another, the incident further illustrates the Reagan ad- ministration's idea of a "True American". The ad requested that the 200 performers be "clean-cut, all- American" types. Apparently, the administration feels that bearded men are not entirely American; news which undoubtedly would have shocked Abraham Lincoln. creates a weakness that too often cannot be overcome." Given our own massive budget-deficit, we can ill afford to give with no promise of an end in sight. Any food or technological aid should be given contingent on plans that will make nations self-reliant in the future, while respecting the rights of all other species and the limits of the earth. This may obviously be translated into concurrently giving aid in areas of family planning and insistence on gover- nment backed policies for the same objec- tives. Specifically addressing the problems of water irrigation, we in the United States already face a difficult problem along the West Coast where the aquifer is becoming in- creasingly saline under intensive watering of the desert. Studies are under way on siltation, salt, drainage, and ecological balance. The same problems around the world are outlined in Losing Ground by Erik Eckholm. The basic conclusion Eckholm reaches is that "the ex- pected benefits of irrigation projects may never materialize, if more heed is not paid to the overall ecological balance. The great burst in world irrigation projects during the third quarter of this century cannot be repeated during the last quarter. As the need for fresh water grows faster than its availability, the insidious loss of irrigation capacity to salt and silt is sure to become more visible." Since pointing out difficulties with irrigation at home, we might look further at the impact of our way of life on world resour- ces. Rather surprisingly our appetites can be found as the reason for loss of untold hectares of tropical rain forest upon which the world depends for renewal of its oxygen supply. Woodlands are sacrificed to provide grazing for beef cattle. Burn-off of forest supplies ash for grasses, but by the end of two years the demineralized land became useless for any contribution to human good. According to State of the World-1984 published by World- watch Institute, grazing land in Central America more than doubled between 1961 and 1978, while wooded land diminished by 39 per- cent. "U.S. demand for beef has fostered con- siderable conversion of forest to pasture. A little over two decades ago, the United States imported only 2,000 tons of beef. By 1978 beef imports had risen to 100,000 tons and six out of the seven beef exporting Central American countries were sending as much as 85 to 90 percent of their total beef exports to the United States. Much of that beef feeds the growing demands of the U.S. fast food outlets. Fash food chains can offer low-priced ham- burgers by using beef raised by low-cost labor on converted forestlands in Central America." In The Primary Source, we read that "In 1960 an average American consumed well under 40 kilograms of beef each year, a total that rose by 1976 to well over 60 kilograms. Americansenow eatrless beef per person, but because of our expanding population, the overall total continues to edge upward." Thus our own increase in numbers additionally taxes worldwide food resources. More on this subject may be found in Building A Sustainable Society by Lester Brown. As we enjoy our bounty, we have an altruistic affection for the rest of the world. Mrs. Ray Kroc, heiress to the McDonald franchise fortune, and a truly philanthropic person has sent one million dollars to aid Ethiopia. While it is ironic that these funds became available as the result of the foregoing rapacious use of poorly arable lan- as, we all share the American way of enjoying our burgers and'applaud the magnanimity of everyone who tries to help to the extent that they can, and in whatever waythey can. The business of survival goes on as a power- ful force. We can learn from the devastation of Ethiopia on the one hand and the success of China on the other as the latter practices limitation of growth of population. By giving more attention to writers as quoted above on saving the planet for future generations, we can see how to assist even third-world nations to practice family planning. The majority opinion is listened to by political leaders in a democracy. Other nations may follow our lead in population policies. We hope that the Ethiopian nightmare is final and will not be repeated. If it occurs again there or elsewhere or in greater severity, it will tell us the same message once more. How rapidly and successfully this latest ex- plosion of death and suffering awakens the world to better manage its stewardship of they globe will determine how many times the oc-- cupants of this planet still need to be wren- ched back to reality by more of the same. Krohn is a graduate of the University in religion and holds a masters degree in community medicine from Wayne State University. ..2 LETTERS TO THE DAILY Birdsall's research should be continued, i To the Daily Recently, attempts have been made to discontinue Engineering Prof. Theodore Birdsall's resear- ch on underwater acoustics based on the fact that it has applications to naval warfare and that it was partially funded by the Navy. Fortunately, as this research has other applications, Professor Birdsall's proposal to continue the research was approved. An oft repeated complaint is that Professor Birdsall is being funded by the Navy and is using naval research facilities. Even if "the Navy is not funding this classified research for its civilian applications," the funding pays for research of civilian, as well as military, applications (which . -.L .... L 1 e ---- . : - 1- &L. Y plications, perhaps the average person does not feel that they are important, as they probably will not seem to affect our everyday life. But suppose there was research that did. For example, a University chemist might be working on a new, lighter, and stronger metal alloy. This alloy could be used to make stronger ships, planes, and tanks and the research on it might be funded by one of the armed forces. Some might argue that this research has "obvious applications" to various forms of warfare. However, in doing so, they would be ignoring the fact that such an BLOOM COUNTY alloy would also make safer and more fuel efficient automobiles. As long as research has beneficial applications and does not itself harm human life, it should be allowed to continue. -Charles Lipsig January 10 Letters to the Daily should be typed, triple- spaced, and signed by the individual authors. Names will be withheld only in unusual circum- stances. Letters may be edited for clarity, gram- mar, and spelling. 0 N 6 by Berke Breathed Ii- HEWO. N 66/iCON."1 -L#JNtOIR EDITORIAL YES.. 9 6H1L.5O MUCH AW Y65...RI&Ht(. 1h 'PER5ONALt5" I SK... 2'MARSTRPIEC6 A w %v '' r t L