May is Senior Citizen Month. The v President of the United States so designates this month to help recognize the contribu tion our elderly citizens make to society and, in turn, to recognize their special problems and needs. How many Americans are in this group? Well, one in every ten of our citizens has reached or passed his - 65th birthday. This means we have more than 20 million elders in our total population of over 200 million. The over-65 group is growing every day by a net gain of 000 persons a day, or 330,000 a year. The total number of such people has grown by 30% since 1961. Within 25 Years Predictions are that within 25 years or so, older citizens (people 50 and over) will approach or constitute a majority of our popu lation. One out of three will be 65 or over. With this kind of growth ahead of us, it's predicted that families will place more emphasis on plan ning for the elderly than for children. Certainly more thought has been given to all this since the organizing and carrying out of the 1971 White House Conference on Aging. And in this column I’m interested in pointing out that nutrition is perhaps one of the most important aspects of the aging years. Besides good general health habits, nothing will add useful years to life as substantially as good meals good “food choices WHITE WASHING > with DAIRY WHITE - Dries White - - Does Not Rub Off - No Wet Floors - Is Compatible With Disinfectant MAYNARD L BEITZEL Witmer, Pa. 392-7227 GET BARE GROUND WEED CONTROL Pramitol* liquid gets rid of weeds where you don't want them. In fences. And around buildings, silos, - feedlots, gas tanks, and pumps. It’s great for knocking out weeds where you can’t*mow. Pramitol liquid works like a charm. One early spray keeps weeds down all season. Try Pramitol 25E liquid. You’ll find all kindsof usesfor it Or, if you prefer, use easy to spread Pramitol pellets. _Smok»town / Pa. 397-3539 Doctor in the Kitchen 8 by Laurence M. Hurah, M.D. Consultant, National Dairy Council SENIOR CITIZEN MONTH Older people do not need special foods'. They may need a softer diet, say, if there are dental prob lems. But in the main, they need the same foods as all of us, but smaller portions, fewer calories. If older people eat the same meals as in years before, that in itself can add weight to their bodies as they become more sed entary. Thus they must cut down on portions as physical demands become less. Eating alone can sometimes offer little incentive to prepare and enjoy good meals. Eating alone can also present psycholog ical problems. These factors are considerations when it is pro posed that ways must be found to provide better production and distribution of food to older peo ple in both metropolitan and su burban areas and in isolated and rural areas as well. Older people need easy access to the food supply. Methods of assuring this must take into ac count whether an aged person lives alone, in a family, in a group, or in an institution. Many plans have been launched, in cluding getting meals to where aged people live and places near by where they can join others in a kind of “school lunch for the aged.” The best provision for tomor row, in my opinion, will be for today’s adult to learn well his nutritional needs and how to meet them. He will then be a better senior citizen himself when the time comes. Easy Access Needed FOOD FADDISM In my opinion, food faddism flourishes because it offers re sponses to some of our most deep seated yearnings—yearnings such as wanting to believe in miracles, and, certainly, the desire that everyone has to win over any fears he might face. Now what better way could one ask for to meet these needs than to believe that certain foods are miracle foods and that through them we will have super-health, or freedom from ill health? Be sides, the lure of food cults is not new. It is part of our heritage. In America, in particular, the snake oil salesman enjoys an honored place in our history, in our respect for gumption and en terprise. So why not macrobiotic diets? Nutrition, A Young Science Nutrition, which is a relatively young science, is particularly sus ceptible to distortion, fads and cults. We teach that proper nu trition is associated with health and poor nutrition with disease. The public response to so-called “health foods” stems from this concept. Does it matter? Are enough people involved in food faddism for physicians like me to worry about? The answer is “yes.” Estimates of the market for fad foods run as high as $1 billion by 1975. And an indication that “health food” items have really caught on is obvious when major food chains add “natural” food sections to their stores. My argument, for example, with so-called “organic foods” is not so much with the items them selves—except that they are un necessarily ejgjensive. My con cern is that we could in no way produce enough food for this country by such methods and the fact that such foods are not su perior nutritionally to those raised by the more traditional methods of agriculture in which chemical fertilizers are used. What Is "Natural” Since all of us and everything about us are part of nature, what can there be that is unnatural? To me, anything that “is” is “natur al.” And as for plant growing, plants use only inorganic not or ganic forms of plant food. They utilize nitrates, potassium, iron and phosphates as determined by the plant’s heredity If the soil is deficient in certain nutrients you will get less crop but the quality of the plants you get will not be affected. A plant so deficient in its own needs would simply with er, be obviously stunted, or die— and it would never reach the market as food. I object, then, to so-called “na tural” foods because they are sold and consumed under false premi ses—premises that help to block the nutrition education efforts in this country to help our people know best how to choose their food wisely. Next week we’ll talk more about this. c r/Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 19,1973 Supports Full Watergate Probe The sordid mess that has become known as the Water gate affair has shaken the faith of the American people ! n their government and in the political process. To restore lost confidence and trust there must be a complete public airing of all facts about the entire Water gate affair, including highly improper cover-up attempts and any other illegal financial or political activities. The President has taken an important first step in getting to the bottom of the Water gate mess by accepting per sonal responsibility for the conduct of members of his staff, and by pledging his full cooperation to reveal all facts and to hold accountable all persons responsible. I recently cosponsored a Senate resolution urging the President to appoint a special prosecutor from outside the Executive Branch to conduct all criminal investigations and actions relating to the Water gate incident and other acts of political espionage during the 1972 Presidential cam paign. The criminal investigation must be conducted by some one of the highest integrity who has no connection what soever with this Administra tion or with any of the parties who would be involved in the investigation. The public must have complete confi dence in the thoroughness and completeness of the Watergate investigation. Only a special prosecutor, who is beyond reproach and who can immediately command the re spect of the American public, can provide us with those as surances. I also support a full inves tigation by the Senate Select Committee to Investigate 1972 Presidential Campaign Activities. Earlier this year I voted in favor of setting up this committee, and against a watered-down investigation which would have looked into every Presidential election back to 1964. This amend ment would have - severely weakened the investigation of the Watergate. Washington Report By U.S. Senator Dick Schweiker Prior to the President’s ad dress to the nation on Water gate, I publicly called for the immediate termination of all activities of the Committee to Re-elect the President. This committee obviously is knee deep in the Watergate affair. It’s continued existence is a blot on the name and the fu ture of the Republican Party. The Watergate incident also should spur our steps to create an independent Federal Bureau of Investigation. The serious lapse of independent integrity leading to the re'sig nation of Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray 111 point to the necessity of removing the FBI from any possibility of political influence. My own bill on this subject, by setting up a single ten-year term for the FBI director, would guar antee that no President could ever appoint more than one FBI director, and that no FBI director would be subject to re-appointment pressures that could undermine the au thority of an independent FBI The entne Watergate affair has been a shock to all of us who believe in integrity and good government. I am not one of those people who be lieve that this kind of thing has gone on for a long time and was being done by all politicians. I totally reject that this kind of thing has gone on for a long time and was being done by all politi cians. I totally reject that concept! Our job now is to get all the facts out in full public view, to press for prosecution of all those criminally in volved, and to set up and en force such procedures and laws as are necessary to make sure that the first Watergate affair is the last Watergate affair. 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