NANToN/Wxno L The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 2, 1995 -5A Population my cause shortae of foo Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON-The world's abil- ity to match its population growth with more bountiful grain harvests has fi- nally come to an end, ushering in a new age of scarcity in which food prices could soar to record levels while food supplies fall to record lows, the Wordwatch Institute said yesterday. The nonprofit institute, which moni- tors global environmental trends, says the initial signs of shortage are already evident, with world grain consumption having exceeded production for three consecutive years and grain stocks fall- ing to their lowest levels in two de- cades. "The evidence that we are moving into a new era is close to overwhelm- ing," said Worldwatch President Lester R. Brown. Most international commodities trad- ers and government economic special- ists have failed to see the looming short- ages, Brown said, because their fore- casts fail to take into account critical changes in international population, land use, water supply, fertilizer effective- ness and fishing capacity, Brown said. "We are looking at afuture so differ- ent, it is hard to imagine," he said. International grain production has seen no growth since the bumper crop of 1990, when 1.78 billion tons ofgrain were harvested, Brown said. In 1995, that number decreased to 1.69 billion tons. During the same tie period, Worldwatch noted, the world popula- tion has grown by 440 million people; meaning less grain per person each year. The problem of more mouths and less food is compounded by the fact that farmers around the world are losing land to global industrialization and squandering precious water, Brown said. At the same time, oceanic fisher- ies have hit their limits, with the sea- food catch per person declining 8 per- cent since 1989, according to Worldwatch. For years, farmers have been able to increase crop yields even as land sup- plies dwindled, by increasing fertilizer use - a solution that stopped working in 1990, Brown said. After 40 years of escalation, global fertilization started declining in 1989. "I do not think that national political leaders have realized that the old for- mula for boosting grain production is no longer working, and there is no new formula," said Brown, whose article in the upcoming issue of World Watch magazine describes as an impending etisis in the world's food supply. High court may snuff out efforts to limit tobacco ads WASHINGTON (AP) - The Su- preme Court tackled a free-speech dis- pute yesterday that could halt President Clinton's efforts to limit cigarette ad- vertising. As the court considered a challenge to Rhode Island's ban on liquor-price advertising, several justices voiced con- cern overwhat upholding the ban might mean for government's regulatory power over other potentially harmful products. "Is your product special?" Breyer asked Rhode Island's lawyer, Rebecca Partington. "Is there a stopping point?" Courtroom hypotheticals included mentions ofred meat, high-cholesterol foods, guns, bullets and foods that cause cancer when ingested in great amounts by lab animals, but not ciga- rettes. Yet the court's decision, expected by July, could clarify the federal government's authority over cigarette advertising. That authority already is being questioned mightily by the to- bacco industry. Clinton and the Food and Drug Ad- ministration have proposed rules that would forbid cigarette brand advertis- ing at sports events and on T-shirts and other goods. Proposed rules would ban tobacco billboards within 1,000 feet of schools and playgrounds and limit the use of pictures and colors in cigarette But the power to ban speech about something you're not banning Is ..different"f -- Rebecca Partington Rhode Island's lawyer ads. Rhode Island law allows advertising for alcoholic beverages but requires publishers to exclude any mention of prices, or even the word "sale." Partington said the state expected its advertising ban, which dates to 1956, to keep prices higher than if advertising were allowed. The goal, she said, is "promotion of temperance." She argued that state control over alcohol is "unique" because of the Constitution's 21st Amendment, which ended Prohibition but gave states the power to control liquor sales within their borders. "A total advertising ban (on liquor) would be constitutional," Partington argued. Evan Lawson, a Boston lawyer rep- resenting the liquor stores that chal- lenged the ban, agreed that Rhode Is- land could ban all liquor advertising or, indeed, ban all sales of liquor within the state. "But the power to ban speech about something you're not banning is ... dif- ferent," he argued. Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Antonin Scalia seemed particularly skeptical about the 21st Amendment's effect on a state's power to interfere with commercial speech. Scalia at one point called the 21st Amendment "entirely irrelevant" to the ad-ban dispute. M Ifthe court finds no special relevance in a state's special powers under the 21st Amendment, its ruling probably will be written more broadly - affect- ing other potentially harmful products or activities as well. Questioning from the justices im- plied that they will rely on two past decisions in weighing the validity of Rhode Island's law. A 1980 high court ruling said com- mercial speech that is truthful, not misleading and concerns a legal'ac- tivity may be limited only if govern- ment has a substantial interest, "the limitation directly advances that in- terest and is no more extensive than necessary. A 1986 decision, which the court seemingly has moved away from since, said government may prohibit advertis- ing that promotes an activity it could prohibit altogether. A picture worth 25,000 rubles A Russian photographer and his bear wait for tourists and passers-by to have their pictures taken on Moscow's Arbat pedestrian street yesterday. An instant photograph with the bear costs 25,000 rubies, the equivalent of $6. House votes to make late-term abortion procedure illegal Anti-abortion strategy shift gets 288-139 vote The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The House voted by a large margin yesterday to make a rarely used technique to end pregnancies in their late stages a crime, the first at- tempt by Congress to limit abortion pro- cedures since the Supreme Court legal- ized them more than two decades ago. Lawmakers on both sides of the issue said the 288-139 vote marked a shift in the anti-abortion forces' strategy in the wrenching battle over abortion. "This is the first time that we have had a vote on the legalization" of an abortion procedure, said Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.), a leading House abor- tion opponent. He said anti-abortion law- makers would "begin to focus on the methods and declare them to be illegal." "Today's vote is just the beginning of a series of gruesome debates this House will see on abortion," predicted Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D-Colo.). '" Indeed, the vote was one of a string of abortion-related matters before the House this week. The confluence of the votes has made many House Republi- cans who support abortion rights un- easy about how their party was portray- ing itself. "It's a mistake politically," said Rep. James C. Greenwood(R-Pa.). A similar bill, introduced by Sen. Robert C. Smith (R-N.H.) is pending in in the Senate. "I suspect there is a sig- nificant degree of support for it here, too," Senate Minority Leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) said. Aided by graphic drawings depicting the procedure, which anti-abortion forces call a "partial birth abortion," supporters ofthe legislation went into great detail to describe it in yesterday's debate: A woman's cervix is widened and the fetus is removed feet-first until only the head remains in the woman's uterus. A doctor may crush the fetus's skull or suck out the brain in order to allow the head to pass through the cervix. The measure would subject doctors who perform the procedure to fines orup $Today's vote is just the beginningof a series of gruesome debates this House will see on abortion." - Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D-Colo.) to two years in prison and to civil suits. Physicians could escapepenalties ifthey prove they "reasonably believed" the technique was necessary to save the woman's life and "no other procedure would suffice for that purpose." Only two physicians, one in Ohio and the other in California, routinely perform the procedure, according to the National Abortion Federation, which represents doctors, nurses and centers that provide abortion services. Of the 1.5 million abortions done each year, the group estimated only about 450 are done in this manner. Abortion-rights advocates said the method is used only in cases when se- vere birth defects - such as anenceph- aly, the absence ofbrain development- or conditions threatening the woman's life are discovered too late in pregnancy to use most other techniques. Supporters of the legislation, including the National Right to Life Committee and the Chris- tian Coalition, argue that the procedure is used to perform elective abortions. Pregnancy lasts 40 weeks and is di- vided into thirds, called "trimesters." The most common procedure for sec- ond-trimester abortions, those done af- ter the 13th week of pregnancy, is called dilation and evacuation. In this tech- nique, the cervix is dilated and a doctor uses instruments to break up the fetus and remove the parts. Fewer than I percent ofU.S. abortions are done after the 20th week of preg- nancy, said David A. Grimes, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Uni- versity of California at San Francisco. At this stage, the alternative to the "partial birth" technique is for doctors to induce labor by administering hormones or in- jecting saline solution into the uterus, he said. He said that method is more expen- sive and more psychologically traumatic for the woman. Reflecting the issue itself, yesterday's House debate was emotional. Opponents repeatedly described the procedure in graphic terms. "You wouldn't take acoy- ote, a mangy raccoon and treat an animal this way," said House Judiciary Commit- tee Chairman Henry J. Hyde (R-Ill.). Arguing that the fetus would be a protected life if its head was outside its mother's body, Rep. Charles T. Cahady (R-Fla.), the bill's prime sponsor, said: "The difference between the partial bjrth abortion procedure and homicide is a mere three inches." I. - cml.. 3eV Introducing a new way to help bridge the gap between what you've saved and what you'll need during retirement. 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