.4 The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 5, 1986 -Page 7 Kellogg Co. to cancel plant tours in April BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (AP) - Bullhorn in hand, Brian Smith calls the action as countless caramel- colored corn kernels cascade down a chute, get flattened by rollers and ride a conveyor toward a 575-degree roaster. "Then they're taken downstairs and Jsprayed with eight essential vitamins," says Smith, passing a scoopful of still-hot flakes among his listeners. SMITH HAS just shown another tour group how Kellogg Co., the world's largest cereal maker, makes cornflakes, the world's best-selling cereal. "I feel bad that some day I won't be able to take my kids through here," he says after the group leaves. Kellogg has been letting the public stroll through its biggest and oldest cereal plant since 1906, when founder Will Keith Kellogg began cranking out Kellogg's Corn Flakes. Since then, the company says, 6.5 million people have taken the tour. THE FREE tours will be history af- ter April 11, however, because com- pany officials fear corporate spies might steal the new technology plan- ned for Kellogg's flagship plant. That troubles some people in this southwest Michigan town of 39,000 residents, a city built on breakfast food. Besides being home to Kellogg's corporate headquarters, Battle Creek is the site of large General Foods and Ralston Purina cereal-making operations. It is a city where streets, schools and a downtown city center bear the Kellogg moniker. It's also a city that keys its tourist industry to the tens of thousands of people who visit every year to see what makes Tony a tiger and why roasted rice goes snap, crackle and pop. "THE ASSOCIATION for Battle Creek has always been the Kellogg Co. tour. That has been our main destination" for visitors, said Bonnie Telder, head of the Battle Creek- Calhoun County Visitors & Conven- tion Bureau. She said the bureau hopes to replace the tour with other cereal- related tourist lures. "It's going to have a major, major effect on the tourist business, not just in Battle Creek but the state of Michigan," she said. "They had. 150,000 to 200,000 people go through that tour every year.", But with a $500 million plant modernization project already begun, Kellogg spokesman Dick Lovell said the company can't risk a visit by cor- porate spies. Researchers unsure of (Continued from Page 1) Rudman's effects. "ANYTHING YOU say is pretty hypothetical," he said, noting the lack of details available for the 1987 budget. He added that Gramm- Rudman might be found uncon- stitutional in federal courts. "It's hard to be very specific," Heebink said. Faculty members whose research may be effected are also taking a cautious line. "I REALLY can't say yet" what the effects will be, said Electrical Engineering Prof. Wayne Stark. Stark's project, "Array Processing Equipment for Commuications," is funded by the National Science Foun- dation, which has slated a 4.3 percent cut in all funding. He could only guess at the effect of the cut on his project. "I guess there's a 4.3 percent chan- ce it will not be funded," he said. Mechanical Engineering Prof. Massood: Kaviany said his project, "Controlled Energy Supply in Drying Processes," will be affected, but he doesn't yet know how. KAVIANY'S project is funded by budget cut effec& both the National Science Foundation Wilson was unavailable for com- and the Department of Energy, which ment, but in a Jan. 22 memo she en- has planned 3.7 percent decrease in couraged researchers to actively; research funding. pursue funding. The project directors have warned me there were going to be less funds Kaviany reiterated Wilson's point, than last year," Kaviany said, "But I saying "We must continue to go after don't have any specific measures if (funding) - that is one thing we cani things don't go through." not give up. Associated Press last visitors to Tony the Tiger and his little friend greet some of the Kellogg's Battle Creek plant, as tours will end April 11. S. A frican lawyers challenge apartheid CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) - About 30 mixed- race lawmakers, charging "we have been mistreated for so long," were refused meals in the whites-only members' dining room in Parliament yesterday in the second challenge to segregation in two days. The unusual attack on South Africa's system of apar- theid, or racial segregation, came as Winnie Mandela visited her jailed husband, Nelson, for the second straight day. The visit sparked new speculation that the release of Mandela, the leader of the outlawed African National Congress rebel group, was imminent. THERE WAS also new violence 'yesterday as blacks continued 17 months of violent protests against white rule by burning at least two buses, stoning police and trying to set fire to a house in Shoshanguve, northwest of Johan- nesburg. Witnesses said police fired shotguns at about 2,000 blacks demonstrating against the arrest Monday of more than 100 protesters. No one was injured. More than 1,180 blacks have died, more than half of them shot by police, in the violent demonstrations against the white-minority government. SIX MIXED-race, or "colored," members of the "colored" House of Representatives were refused meals in the parliamentary dining room Monday, three daysaf- ter President Pieter Botha told Parliament apartheid is ending. "South Africa has outgrown the outdated system of paternalism, as well as the outdated concept of apar- theid," Botha said in an address to Parliament Friday. Yesterday, waiters refused to serve about 30 mixed- race lawmakers and removed salad bowls and water from their tables as they staged an hourlong sit-down protest against apartheid in Parliament. "We want freedom and justice," said Patrick Macken- zie, one of the mixed-race representatives. "We have been mistreated for so long. We are tired of being humiliated and kicked about." White opposition lawmaker Horace van Rensburg vowed to boycott the restaurant until it is integrated. Navy Medical Scholarships provide: " Your full tuition, authorized fees and educational expenses. " The cost of required books and supplies. " Rental fees for necessary equipment such as microscopes. * A monthly cash payment directly to you, to spend as you please. Participation in the Navy Health Profession Scholarship Program does not involve any military training nor does it require wearing of a uniform. Your academic routine and lifestyle will remain the same as other medical students. Qualifications for this scholarship include: * Be accepted for the next entering class or currently enrolled in an approved school of medicine or osteopathy. " Be a U.S. citizen. " Be in excellent health and good physical condition. For more information, Call: 1-800-922-1703 Mon.-Wed. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Proposal to be on ballot (Continued from Page 1) Referendum author Dean Baker, president of Rackham Student Government, said that he cannot an- swer questions about which firms might be eliminated from the Career Planning and Placement inter- viewing schedule if such a referen- dum were to pass. MSA was divided on whether or not to favor the provisions of the proposal on the referendum. Those opposing the provisions said M that students should have a right to make their own decisions regarding which firms to interview with. Baker stressed that students could still interview with any employers they want, but that they would have to go off campus to do so. "Career Planning and Placement already decides if a corporation is an appropriate place for University students (to work), so (passing the referendum) would not be depriving students," Baker said. ii:tY:: "T'!: i4T - - - --------- J .t.S-h". < iT ' fin nt 3. . . SY .. S "-,IMA a... o" i"S..Y "sM : y!v, . :: ...;I:a ": S{d:{>a3'>-:':- :' ^p.: L..a4.c, IR.,.;:';:::;: it'i:::",5''"ii:i>;: " ..<- ., . st. !d>!tr 1. t . Round trip. Atly+, where we go. This Spring Break, if you and your friends then be good for travel for 15 days from the date