The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 30, 2002 - 7A Scientists study carcinogen levels in everyday food WASHINGTON (AP) - Scientists have found a clue to the chemical reaction that may cause potato chips, french fries and other fried or baked starchy foods to build up high levels of a possible cancer-causing substance. The suspect is asparagine, a naturally occurring amino acid that, when heated with certain sugars such as glucose, leads to the formation of the worrisome substance acry- lamide. The Food and Drug Administration has made studying acrylamide's risk and deter- mining how to lower its levels in food one of its highest research priorities, according to a plan that agency officials were to dis- cuss today with consumer groups and food manufacturers. Canada's government made the discovery about the suspect chemical reaction and has ordered food manufacturers to look for ways to alter it and thus lower levels of acrylamide in food. Cincinnati-based manu- facturer Procter & Gamble Co. says its sci- entists, too, have found the asparagine connection. It is the first, clue to emerge in the mys- tery of acrylamide since Swedish scientists made the surprise announcement in the spring that high levels of the possible car- cinogen are in numerous everyday foods: french fries, potato chips, some types of breakfast cereals and breads - plenty of high-carbohydrate foods that are fried or baked at high temperatures. The chemical was not found in boiled foods, which are cooked at lower temperatures. Sweden's findings were confirmed in June by governments in Norway, Britain and Switzerland, and preliminary testing of sev- eral hundred foods by the FDA suggests U.S. foods contain similaracrylamide levels, said Richard Canady, who is directing the agency's assessment of acrylamide's risk.. Acrylamide is used to produce plastics and dyes and to purify drinking water. Although traces have been found in water, no one expected high levels to be in basic foods. It causes cancer in test animals, but it has not been proved to do so in people. Still, Swedish scientists have said the levels are high enough that foodborne acrylamide might be responsible for several hundred cases of cancer in that country each year. In the United States, the FDA has been careful to caution that acrylamide so far is only a suspected carcinogen. The FDA has not yet advised consumers to alter their diets to avoid it. Still uncertain is whether the FDA, once it finishes testing different foods next year, will publicly identify which brands contain the most acrylamide - information wanted by consumer advocates. For now, Canady said, "We want to rein- force ... eating a balanced diet with plenty of fruits and vegetables. That's the best way to ensure that you're getting adequate nutri- tion." The FDA has an impressive research plan but "should give the public better advice," said Michael Jacobsen of the consumer group Center for Science in the Public Interest. "People should be consuming less french fries and potato chips for other reasons - the salt, the calories, the fat - and the gov- ernment should have been urging that any- way. Here's yet another reason," he said. The food industry stresses that while fried potato products are getting most of the bad publicity - most testing so far shows the highest levels in them - acry- lamide is in a wide variety of foods. Procter & Gamble said Friday that its testing found acrylamide in such previously unimplicated foods as roasted asparagus and banana chips. "The other aspect people need to look at is while a french fry or a potato chip may be high ... in concentration, it still comes down to what is the total contribution of that food to the diet," said Henry Chin of the National Food Processors Association. New York-bound Cessna crashes, leaving pilot dead Raise the roof7 VIRGIL, N.Y. (AP) - A pilot who died after his twin-engine Cessna aircraft crashed near the Cortland County airport was remembered as an adventurous man who loved to scuba dive and watch the Dallas Cowboys. Kevin Hundshamer, 54, was killed Friday night after returning from a business trip to Michigan, according to his family. "He wanted to live life to the fullest," said his daughter Jillian Hundshamer. The eight-passenger Cessna 310L had left from the airport in Gladwin, Mich., and was on approach to Cort- land County Airport when it crashed in a wooded area, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Federal inspectors on Saturday found wreckage strewn across a path of 210 feet, said Air Safety Investigator David Muzio of the National Transportation Safety Board. Witnesses reported hearing a low- flying plane and then an explosion. The muddy and hilly terrain made it difficult for rescuers to reach the crash site. Hundshamer starting flying as a hobby about 14 years ago but began using his plane for business after being laid off from the Miller Brewing plant in Volney, said Jillian Hundshamer. Hundshamer, of Jamesville, founded Hy-Tech Services in 1994 and was flying on business as a high-tech trainer the night of the accident. The week before, Hund- shamer and a mechanic conducted an annual inspection of the plane. "He taught us so much about God and morals and values and how to be good parents," Jillian Hund- shamer said. EEONCE WAS A Mic"IGAN WRITER WHOSE STORIES COULDN'T BE ANY TIGWTER, Ar THE DAILY SHE WORKED, IN T HE DIAG SHE LURKED, AtD H ER LIFE WAS MADE ALL THE BRIGHTER AP PHOTO Gullhaghah lays down pieces of timber as he builds a roof near Kabul for a family recently returned from a Pakistani refugee camp. the michigan daily QUALIFIED STUDENTS TO TEACH. 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Dingell said he is unsure of the extent and timing of the threat posed to the United States by Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and for that reason does not know whether he would be justified in supporting a war resolution with or without international, regional or U.N. support. But before he supports a use of force resolution, the congressman said the Bush administration must explain what it will do after the Iraqi leader is deposed. "If we knock out Saddam Hussein, we have no choice but to make sure the rest of the Middle East is stable and the peo- ple of Iraq" can form a democratic soci- ety, before Congress supports a "shoot-em-up," Dingell said. Many of those gathered at the League expressed concern that the United States would be violating international law if it took preemptive action against Iraq without the support of the United Nations, and thereby violating American law since the United States ratified the U.N. charter. Some even questioned Bush's motives, fearing a "war over oil" and a gimmick to distract Americans from economic woes as the mid-term elec- tions approach. Dingell said he had no reason to ques- tion the president's reasoning in request- ing the congressional authorization, and rather wanted to focus on the question of whether the country should or should not enter into war. "The United States must be very sure we have the ability to prevail and the solid plan for the conduct of any military action we perform,"he said. One speaker at the forum said that any preemptive strike against Iraq would open up a Pandora's box. The invoking of the president's ration- ale for going to war, he said, "will enable any country at any time for any reason to attack any other country." As to whether Hussein is connected to the Sept. 11 attacks, Dingell said, MOSES Continued from Page IA Jennifer Granholm, state Sen. Loren Bennett (R-Canton Twp.), U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D-Detroit), U.S. Sens. Carl Levin (D-Detroit) and Debbie Stabenow (D-Lansing) and state House Minority Leader Buzz Thomas (D-Detroit). LSA junior Megan Wilbur gave her response to the rally, stating, "As young people, we often don't think of problems in urban areas and it's important for us to get involved with groups such as MOSES. They are addressing issues that will be important to us in the coming years." First-year Urban Planning mas- ters student Zeb Acuff stated, "I tend to be skeptical of politicians. None of them were going to say' 'no' to anything ... it will be inter- esting to see if they follow through with anything." Rev. Joseph Barlow, president of MOSES and Mt. Zion MBC Ecorce, urged political leaders to "do every- thing in your power to bring justice to the people of this country, so help you God," by changing immi- gration laws so that children who graduate from Michigan high schools will be considered residents regardless of their parent's status as immigrants. This would allow chil- dren of immigrants to pay in-state tuition at colleges and universities, rather than out of state tuition that they currently face. Thomas agreed to endorse the measure, stating, "Nothing is more important than the education of our children." Organizers moved on to discus- sion of the "Fix It First" campaign. "Many of our urban and suburban communities are in crisis ... if we cannot afford to maintain current infrastructure, why do we continue to develop land that used to be orchards and farm land?" said Greg Pitoniak, Taylor Mayor and Michi- gan Suburbs Alliance leader. Cindy Reese from the Greater Southern MBC outlined MOSES' vision for the solution of urban sprawl and lack of revitalization of existing infrastructure. "The second part of the solution is to unite the city and the suburbs," she said. "You are the third part." She added that getting govern- ment leadership to support "Fix It SAFE Continued from Page 1A Discrimination Committee to raise money for hepatitis vaccinations and then proceeded to the Diag to show support for SAFE, Kiblawi said. "Basically SAFE this past week has been the victim of an intimidation and smear campaign with the intent of sti- fling discussion on the Arab-Israeli conflict," he added. The first of the e-mails sent Wednes- day from the address Kiblawi moder- ates for SAFE contained anti-Israel sentiments and went out to more than' 1,000 faculty and staff members. The second e-mail was nearly identi- cal and went out to student leaders, encouraging them to speak out against Israel at the conference. "We're here on the Diag to make a statement that nothing will affect our resolve to fight for freedom and equality and to open the circle of debate," Kiblawi said. LSA sophomore Aesha Ahmad said LAZARO Continued from Page 1A "We sort of go to sleep when it comes to issues of developing coun- tries because it rarely affects us here ... it's hard to talk about, but by the look of the journalist, you can see that he is affected," said John Collier, former photographer for the Detroit Free Press. "It was a fascinating speech," Wal- lace, a University alum, said. "It gives us a better understanding of the devastation in these countries ... and the problems of governments and religious' leaders not being able to do First" initiatives was the final part. Reese called on Bennett, standing in for Republican gubernatorial candidate Posthumus, and Granholm to endorse the initiative and agree to attend a "Fix It First" rally in Saginaw on May 4. Both agreed to endorse the initia- tive. Bennett pointed out that Detroit's infrastructure was meant to support 2 million people but instead cur- rently supports only half that. Granholm stated that she would "commit to coming to your event ... if you commit to coming to my inauguration." The Rev. G. Patrick Thompson of Church of our Savior Presbyterian in West Bloomfield kicked off the discussion of mass transit. "Every great undertaking begins with a dream," he said. Discussions included the need to start up the Detroit Area Regional Transit Authority which recently received State House and Senate approval. Wayne County Sheriff Robert Ficano committed to appointing a representative from the MOSES coalition to better include the voic- es of the community in issues of mass transit. Discussion of mass transit also included commitments by business- es such as DaimlerChrysler Founda- tion and the Ford Motor Company as well as the AFL-CIO and multi- ple charity organizations to support funding for mass transit. The discussion ended with Levin and Stabenow agreeing to work toward bringing federal mass transit funding to Michigan. Markus said he wanted students to attend the MOSES rally because he thought it was a valuable experience. "This was a meeting'where the politicians were in the audience and the public was running the show," he said. "Most people are used to a kind of politics where the people watch passively." Markus said he hopes this trip inspires greater voter registration and education. He said he also hopes the Univer- sity can put together an organiza- tion on campus to take part in MOSES. This would be the first organiza- tion of its kind on a major college campus. "If we do that, it would be really historic," Markus said. she attended the event because she feels there is a need to discuss divest- ment, and that the e-mail sent by Cole- man indicates that Coleman "didn't want to discuss the divestment from Israel." "We're here to show her that we think that it should be able to be dis- cussed at least, she just completely said 'no we cannot discuss this.' Ahmad added that she feels the past week's events are related to the second National Student Conference on the Palestine Solidarity Movement, which is due to be held Oct. 12-14. "People are trying to shut down the conference we're holding in October and I think we should be able to have it," she said. The Michigan Student Assembly is currently talking to the University administration to respond to the e-mail spoofing that has been taking place and to consider what action will be taken next. - Daily Staff Reporter Stephanie Schonholz contributed to this report. CONFIDENCE Continued from Page 1A "Consumers did not anticipate sig- nificant increases in energy costs in the September survey, nor did they express apprehensions about the war's potential impact on the economy," Curtin said in a statement. LSA senior Shelby Davis is one of the many consumers affected by this year's poor economic environment. 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