Page 4-Thursday, May 21, 1981-The Michigan Daily U.S. votes against WHOforrmul baan GENEVA, Switzerland - The World Health Organization voted 95-1 today to endorse a code of conduct framed to restrict marketing of baby formula and to encourage infant health by breast- feeding. The United States, as expec- ted, voted against the code, and nine members abstained. The non-binding eight-page code urges a global ban on promotion and advertising of baby formula, on distribution of free product samples, and on gifts for promoting the use of formula as a substitute for breast milk. PROPONENTS OF the 'approved marketing code say manufacturers' high-powered sales tactics discourage breaat-feeding - universally regarded aa the healthiest infant nouriahment. They say formula is dangerously misused in the Third World where it is mixed with polluted water under poor health conditions. The Reagan administration, which said it endorses efforts to promote breast-feeding, took its controversial stand on grounds the United Nations organization should not be in the business of issuing international regulations. The U.S. ambassador to U.N. organizations in Geneva, Gerald Helman, said American opposition was based on the code's "overall effect of prescribing a rigid set of rules ap- plicable to companies, health workers and health care systems in all parts of the world." HE SAID THE code also "contains provisions that will cause serious legal and constitutional problems for the United States itself." UNICEF, which worked with WHO in framing the code, has said "it is likely that at least one million children in the developing world die each year from inadequate artificial feeding." Senator Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.), opened a day-long public forum on Capitol Hill with an attack on the Reagan administration for ignoring the "human tragedy" that prompted the WHO to propose the formula regulation. Milliken order -may free risoners (Continued from Pagel) The governor then has 15 days after ministrative steps have "failed to the commission's overcrowding cer- reduce the prisons to the designed tification to issue a sentence-cutting or- capacity," and urged he invoke the new der. law.. 5 THE MICHIGAN Supreme Court last week upheld the law as constitutional. It calls for the minimum sentences of nearly all inmates to be reduced by 90 - g.. days when the prison population is overt capacity for 30 days. - Under tie law, all prisoners within 90" days of the end of their original senten- iE ai1t ces would immediately be eligible for release through the normal parole is preserved on process. -OS. The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND SE' Graduate Library P6T-TI ME Money making opportunity on part" time basis for student who is self- starter and can organize his or her schedule to work with sports related product. For literature and product sample, send $10.00 to: Golden Eagle Trading Co., Ltd. 1919 So. Belle Ave. Corona, Calif. 91720 In Brief. Compiledfrom Associated Press and United Press International reports House overwhelmingly approves Reagan budget WASHINGTON - The House voted overwhelmingly yesterday for President Reagan's slightly reworked budget blueprint approved last week by House-Senate conferees. On a 244-155 vote, the House endorsed the plan for $695.4 billion in spen- ding with a $37.6 billion deficit in fiscal192, which begins Oct. 1. The House acted qoickly, taking about 30 minutes for discussion of the measure which sets targets for congressional committees to follow as they make their spending-decisions. In addition, the package accommodates the three-year, 30 percent reduction in personal income tax rates that Reagan has called for. In a related development, a proposed constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget, advocated as an anti-inflation tool but opposed by the president, has passed its first major congressional test. Pope improves; will resume travels as soon as possible ROME - Pope John Paul II was up and walking around his hospital room yesterday a week after he was shot and wounded, and a Vatican diplomat said the pontiff would resume his international travels as soon as possible. Doctors said half of the 26 stitches used to sew up the pope's abdomen af-. ter emergency surgery had been removed and that John Paul had eaten his first solid food since being shot - a bowl of minestroni soup and a piece of cooked fruit. Dr. Luigi Candia, director of Rome's Gemelli Policlinico Hospital where the pope is being treated, said he hoped that by Thursday the doctors could lift the "guarded prognosis" with which they have characterized their assessment of the pontiff's condition so far. Meanwhile, police sources said Mehmet Ali Agca would probably be moved from Rome police headquarters to a military jail in the next few days because inmates of the capital's two main civilian jails have threatened to kill him if he is sent among them. McCreesh dies as violence continues. BELFAST, Northern Ireland-IRA hunger striker Raymond McCreesh died at the Maze Prison near Belfast last night in the 61st day of a hunger strike for political prisoner status. He was the third hunger striker to die at the prison in just over two weeks. Earlier yesterday, British troops shot two suspected car thieves as security was stepped up for local elections expected to show tle extent of support for Catholic and Protestant militants. Troops and police guarding polling stations became targets for stone- throwing youths in mainly Catholic West Belfast where new outbursts of mob violence were anticipated with the impending death of a fourth IRA hunger striker. PatrickO'Hara suffered "cardiac arrest": yesterday in the 60th day of his fast and his family was summoned to his bedside, IRA officials said. AFL-CIO president rejects Reagan's tax-cut plan WASHINGTON - AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland, demanding great'er tax relief for lower- and middle-income Americans, said yesterday that President Reagan's tax-cut plan would encourage luxury-buying and speculation that would drive up the price of necessities. Testifying before the Senate Finance Committee, Kirkland rejected the economic theory on which Reagan's three-year tax plan is based. He urged a one-year tax cut with additional reductions to follow after the course of the economy becomes clear. The plan supported by the AFL-CIO would refund to taxpayers 20 per- cent of their Social Security payments during the year even if they paid no income tax, with equivalent reductions to those not covered by Social Security. Bomb explodes in California; none hurt in office blast SACRAMENTO, Calif. - A bomb apparently planted in a trash can ex- ploded at a downtown office building, tearing through a rear wall, and police said yesterday they were seeking a man who fled the building shortly before the blast. No one was injured Tuesday night when the bomb rocked the two-story building across the street from the Sacramento County Courthouse. Earlier in the day, the courthouse was evacuated after an anonymous bomb threat. Police found a fake bomb containing two live shotgun shells but no detonator. I I I I I -E 6 6 6