Consumers' Rights Committee Is Formed Foimation of a national Con sume! s’ Rights Committee “de dicated to solving the problem of product boycotts and inter ference with the free flow of food to the American consum er” was announced in Washing ton recently, by Michigan State Senator N. Lorraine Beebe at a news conference held with U. S. Senator George Murphy Of California. su PP° rt ' * n states, for leg- grapes, the Michigan legislator Senator Beebe, R-Dearborn, islation which will give the na- said that these activities “have V* v < „ , I -V > Vlf f f f * 1 - ’i * ,* THE WORLD’S LIGHTEST CHAINSAW! IT WEIGHS WILY 6V2 POUNDS!* f V - * McCULLOCH POWER MAC 6 CENTER BALANCED MASTER GRfP Gives convenient, safe hand control!!! A GREAT BUY FOR WEEKEND WOODCUTTERS The MAC 6 has the MUSCLE—you don’t need any! 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Hiestand & Company 'W J® 3 n»* S^u- majority eac^er °f tion’s farm workers the right to the Michigan State Senate and organize and bargain collective chairman of the new committee ly, if they wish, while at the which also will support national same time protecting the para collective bargaining legisla- mount rights of 200 million tion for farm workers American consumers. peakl f g , H om J prepared “Second, to work with indivi at th® office of Sena- duals and organizations concern “U^Wh°.,armounced re ’ e< * about the growing national i n .ff y ff k® Wl fj sponsor such threat to the consumers’ right egislation in the Congress, to decide for themselves what Senator Beebe said the commit- they wish to buy or not to buy tee would have two major pur- in the marketplace.” poses: Referring to boycott efforts First, to enlist grass roots involving California table Leola Salunga EW CUBES Stevens Feed Mill, Inc. Harold H. Good Stevens Terr© Hill been especially intense in (he Shultz Proposes More Detioit and Wayne County, r Michigan area because oi the Farm Jobs For Youth support given the giape boycott by Walter Reuther ” Sen. Beebe said that food pro duct boycotts arising out of la bor-management problems in the field “cannot be permitted to continue if our free consumer economy is to survive.” “The fair and proper solu tion is national legislation such as the concept proposed by Senator Murphy and supported by membe j cl Ijj ' .:rties, ns well MO i giicvltu. . and cor sumer g and concerned citizens throughout the coun try ” Sen. Beebe, who made a fmst hand inspection of California table grape areas early this month, said that she found that “the picture of a migratory la bor force presented by John Steinbeck in his ‘Grapes of Wiath’ more than three decades ago has no application to work ing and living conditions in California grape fields today.” “The vast majority of vine yard workers are not migrants,” Sen Beebe declared “Wages, while not high, are the highest for farm workers anywhere in the United States. Housing for those workers who do not live permanently in the area range from average to excellent on the larger farms ” In addition, said the Michigan lawmaker, “the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee and its leader, Cesar Chavez, have little support in the fields ” Senator Beebe added that the workers she met in California “expressed resentment over what they considered the false image given them by Mi. Reuther, Mr. Chavez and other boycott organizers and suppoii ers ” She said she hoped that pub lic officials and others “who have found it politically expedi ent to endorse the grape boycott will also travel to the California vineyard country, with open minds and open eyes, to see the facts as they are ” 1 Lancaster Farming. Saturday. May 10.1969—11 Secretaiy of Labor George P. Shultz has pioposed an amend ment to the agricultural hazaid ous-occupations order that would allow 14- and 15 year-old voca tional-agricultural students to drive farm tractois and to opei ate other machinery. The proposal amendment would permit the hiring of these students only after they com i late fo {ra nmg p in the saie use of this equipment and where employers provide constant safety supervision on the job The programs would be conducted by certified vocational agriculture instructors experi enced in the safe operation of tractors and farm machinery The agricultural order prohib its the employment of youth un der 16 years of age in certain particulaily hazaidous farm oc cupations Persons interested in the adop tion or modification of the a mendment have until May 30th to present by mail pertinent written data, views, or argument to the Dnector of the Bureau of Labor Standards. U S Depart ment of Laboi, 400 First Street, N W, Washington, D C 20210. The proposed amendment ap peared in the April 30th Federal Register. frcrr wW ha “Ah, this looks like the caboose finally.. My Neighbors 11^