i [ i 7 4 a | i ¥ eter Page 4 EDITORIAL Solid Waste Hopeful for ecologists, mentalists, and all other Americans concerned with related problems was in the news last week from St. Louis Mo. An experiment involving the use of solid waste as supplementary fuel in conven- tional utility boilers is being conducted in that city. In addition to reducing cost of disposing of solid wastes, the test is expected to lower cost of power production and reduce air pollution. And, of course, if this system can be used in power plants throughout the country, it should reduce greatly the tremendous need we have at present for landfills. The $333,000,000 experiment in St. Louis is reported as a cooperative venture with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the city of St. Louis and its local electric power company. It is financed with a $220,000,000 grant from the federal agency, matched by local funds in the Missouri city. Granted, this is a sizeable amount of money to spend on an experiment—and taxpayers in all 50 states are helping to pay for the project in that ‘midwestern city. However, if it does prove to be a feasible means of producing power, we will all benefit. ~ Using a new formula, boilers at the electric generating plant, burn nearly 300 tons each day of processed refuse, resembling colorless, ordorless confetti. The shredded trash is combined with pulverized coal and produces power. Twelve tons of refuse is used with 54 tons of coal. The processing of refuse, termed a simple one by officials, has refuse trucks dump their loads onto a concrete floor and two tractors push trash onto a conveyor belt to a hammer mill where refuse is shredded; another conveyor belt transports milled waste to a storage bin where metal scraps are magnetically separated and removed. Large trucks carry about 25 tons each of the shredded solid waste from the processing center to the power plant. news environ- watch. Should it prove as auspicious as it promises, it can be of great value to our country—with its rapidly diminishing supply of natural resources. Milk Prices Louden Hill will obviously receive the praise of regional consumer advocates in lowering its retail milk prices, and just as obviously will set off a furor in Harrisburg over its flouting the orders of the Pennsylvania Milk Marketing Board. But the issue does not stop there. Gov. Shapp’s administration has long ad- ‘vocated that retail milk price controls should be abolished, but this would require either a new Milk Marketing Law or the amending of the current 1937 statute. Such a move would have to be realized through action on the part of the slow-moving Pennsylvania General Assembly. - 'Last month, for example, the governor nau prepared a draft legislative bill which would protecting the farmer, and assure that no con- sumer outlet could use milk as a loss leader. In fact a clause in the draft bill would require the retailer to sell milk at no lower a price than would be profit above cost. : A few members of the legislature, however, all Democrats, have opposed the governor’s proposal, thus acting to help pad the pockets of the giant supermarket chains and dairy middlemen to the detriment of consumers. The matter of milk prices has been battered remains far from resolution because of the political influence of the giant chain stores. The issue should be clear enough, what with lower prices in every Furthermore, Pennsylvania milk is being processed and transported to most of those states and sold at a lower price than it is in the Commonwealth. Consumers are becoming a political force to be reckoned with not only in the general assembly, but also before the state agencies. And with a milk hearing scheduled for this region next month, citizens should join Louden Hill in a strong voice to see that milk prices at every outlet become just and ~ Changes By Eric Mayer Ray Andrews was trudging along behind his power mower, enveloped in the cloud of noise’ that hovered around it, hypnotized by the vibrations pulsing up into his hands and the sheer boredom of pacing back and forth across a lawn in which every fierce dandelion and each spreading patch of crabgrass was only too familiar, when, without warning, a cat sauntered across his path. It was one of the cats that lived next door with old Miss Samuels. Seeing that a collision was imminent, he swerved the mower. That was a mistake. Past experience should have taught him that sophisticated and delicate modern mechanisms like power mowers are built to be handled with the utmost care. This un- warranted violence exerted an unforeseen strain on the left rear tire which promptly snapped off and went whirling past Ray’s ear with an indignant whistle to land, in a puff of geranium petals, in the flower bed. The crippled mower skidded to a halt and sat sullenly in the middle of the front yard as if to say, ‘Now see what you’ve done!” The lawn had been divided neatly in half. Toward the house the grass was even and closely cropped but toward the street it grew tall, lush and chaotically with a wild and ragged look. The mower was stopped precisely on the border of these two opposing realms. The testy machine had only that morning returned from a two-weeks stay at the repair shop where, hopefully, the motor had been cured “of its propensity for falling off. Disgusted, Ray fished the tire out of the flower bed. The plastic center had broken, freeing the tire from its axle. Ray went into his kitchen, through a creaking screen door that he had to pull tight behind him, reluctant as it was to shut itself. The refrigerator light had been out for months and the refrigerator’s interior was a dark, dank cavern where mouldering cheeses and shadowy vegetables lurked behind stalagmites of cans and wax cartons. Groping blindly he found a bottle of beer. The twist-off A Nixon-McGovern contest, if it comes to that, will be one of the most incongruous in American history. Few men could be more unalike. Mr. Nixon is watchful and remote, McGovern direct and open. The former distrusts youth; the latter relies on it. They do not see things alike at all. For the president national honor is continuing in Vietnam; for the senator it is getting out. Essentially the president. wants to bolster the American status quo while the senator wants to give it a big shake. | } Mr. Nixon, we think, deserves well of America, uncomfortable though we find that somebody had to break the ice with Peking and with Moscow and Mr. Nixon did it, and also started direct negotiation on arms cuts. It is a splendid service, we think, and it took a lifelong professional Communist-hater like Mr. Nixon to do it. The screams coming from some of the ‘‘betrayed’”’ right-wing organizations indicate the problem. What a tizzy they would have been in if Hubert Humphrey had been elected in 1968 and tried to go to Moscow! And who would have led the denunciation? Why, presumably, Richard Nixon. Since the task had to be done he has been the right man, in many ways, to do it. So now will an ungrateful nation reject Mr. Nixon for a second term? It will be a fascinating’ campaign to watch, particularly if George McGovern, the minister’s son from South Dakota and bomber pilot, World War I, with Distinguished Flying Service Cross, is the Democratic nominee. The press is having cap had been put on crooked and refused to twist. Ray forced it with a can opener, cutting his thumb during the struggle. In the back yard he stretched out in his lawnchair, in the shade, and brooded. His comfortable Elm Street home was replete with conveniences—washing machine, dryer, refrigerator, television, radios, record player ... Some nights, sitting in his dim livingroom, he could feel their uncanny presence in the surrounding rooms, could almost hear the electric life humming through wire arteries under tough metal skins. The dread con- traptions lurked, silent and watchful in every corner, waiting to breakdown, or worse. A human interest story in the Country Courier had told of a man being electrocuted by his toaster. ) Ray was a prisoner in his own home, his appliances his jailors. He was at the mercy of the gadgets. Was the TV watching him even as he watched it, preparing to blow a tube during a crucial moment of an important game? What about the alarm clock that sat beside his bed, peering at him through the depths of the night with an inscrutable phosphorescent gaze? What plans had it for him? Would it fail to ring some morning, allowing him to sleep through, and lose the promotion he’d been expecting? And then there was the gas furnace that sat all but forgotten in a cellar corner, capable of either mischief or massive destruction. He remembered his car. He wondered if it grudgingly carried him to work each morning only so he could go on feeding it gas and tending to its numerous complaints. While following this dreary and well trodden path of thought, Ray fell asleep. He dreamed he was bending over his mower, pulling urgently on the starter cord. His arm felt unspeakably weary as if he'd been tugging without success for hours. The grass under his feet was making an odd gurgling sound. It began to grow with unnatural rapidity, reaching out green tendrils that curled around his legs, slithered up toward his arms. He knew that the mower was his ce § ry A - EX by J.R. Freeman We're in trouble again. At the Stockholm meeting of the United Nations environmental conference last week, the United States delegation headed by Russell Train, chairman of the President’s Council on Environmental Quality, caught a barage of blistering remarks from Swedish Premier Olof Palme, over the ecological warfare we have been conducting in South- east Asia. ' In prepared remarks delivered before the U.N. assemblage, the premier said “The immense destruction brought about by in- discriminate bombing, by large-scale use of bulldozers and herbicides is an outrage some- times described as ecocide, which requires urgent international attention. It is shocking that only preliminary discussions of this matter have been possible so far in the United Nations.” But the premier had nothing to add that hasn’t already been said in this country. Though the U.S. State Department will probably consider cutting off all economic aid to Sweden: because of the remarks, some home-bound critics of the Vietnam conflict have been concerned about. the environ- mental life in Vietnam for a long time. Most notable, perhaps, have been the remarks of Sen. Gaylord Nelson (D-Wis.) who recently addressed the problem from the floor of the Seante. His remarks not only make for interesting thought, but may prove in the end to cost U.S. taxpayers millions. They follow, reprinted from the Congressional Record. Mr. President, suppose we took gigantic only chance. He yanked mightly and felt the rope snap. Desperately he flailed out—then he was being dragged down by the ravenous lawn . . . A Ray was walking through an immense forest. On either side of him rose shadowy walls of foliage that curved inward to'1%eet in a leafy ceiling far over head. Occasional beams of sunlight filtered down to the path. Just as Ray was wondering where he was, a masked man, dressed entirely in black and weilding a huge black sword, stepped out of the trees. “Where be ye headed?’’ the masked man inquired, in a voice that sounded suspiciously like that of Fred, the lawnmower repairman. Ray surprised himself by answering quite readily, “I'm questing after that mythical treasure—the lawnmower that works.” He winced as the flat edge of the masked man’s heavy sword came down on his head. When he awoke he searched through his chain mail, finding no trace of his wallet. At that moment the path before him was lit #f#ith an eerie golden light. Scrambling to his teet he saw, sitting majestically on a great marble pedestal, an old-fashioned hand mower. But even as he stood in awe before this wondrous machine the forest was filled with a terrifying, electric cacophony and a grim host of metal monstrosities, their long cords trailing off into the darkness beyond the path, surrounded him. For a moment they stood there, buzzing fiendishly, then they were upon him. He was helpless to stem the tide. Something that looked like a flying toaster had sunk its steel teeth into his hand=7fe felt himself grabbed from behind, feltiWibidery plastic arms closing around him . . . Ray awoke to find himself trapped in the lawn chair which had collapsed around him as he tossed in fitful sleep. One of Miss Samuels’ cats was sitting in the grass a few feet away, studying his predicament. From his awkward position he looked dolefully at the cat and the cat looked back at him. Ray blinked. a love affair with McGovern momentarily, but we don‘t think it will last; it is trying to make amends for having underrated the senator for so long. Also it’s taking advantage of having a fresh face and a new personality to exploit. Actually, in many ways, McGovern is an accidental candidate. He doesn’t fit into the normal pattern. The normal candidate is the compromiser who can assume the bland, middle position required under the two-party system where each of the rival coalitions jockeys for the vital center. The system always irritates ideologues and idealists. Why can’t we divide sharply between con- servatives and liberals and fight it out? they demand. Well, Barry Goldwater tried that out on the conservative side, and see what hap- pened to him. The two-party system blunts ideological frenzy, or that is the theory, anyway. The “normal” candidate, under the system, would have been Edmund Muskie and he seemed to have the nomination in hand ‘till he blew it, that snowy day in New Hampshire. The primary system is often ridiculed; it is a cruel business; it is an ordeal by publicity, but it winnows people out. It eliminated George Romney in 1968, and it pretty much eliminated Muskie this year. Curiously enough the calm, low-keyed, decent-looking McGovern survived. McGovern has one big asset: he doesn’t look like a run-of-the-mine politician or like any other politician you ever saw before. You may not agree with him but you feel that he is sincere, which he is. Whether this is a lasting asset for a candidate remains to be seen. He is not very eloquent; his delivery is rather dry. He does have a sense of moral outrage. He has taken positions on a lot of matters which are probably impolitic, that the federal government should not get involved in the abortion issue, that penalties for marijuana are often too harsh, that after the war there should be an amnesty for draft resisters. Former attorney general John Mitchell, who hands gloatingly. What a chance this will be John Connally if Mr. Nixon makes the switch. But the big things that anger McGovern aren’t these but the failures, as he sees them, of the American social order. Why is it that the average man can’t seem to make his voice heard in Washington? Why is welfare left, for all the talk, in such an appalling mess? McGovern has answers for these problems, such things as a “minimum income grant” which we are all probably going to be writing about shortly. It amounts to wholesale reform of the tax structure which would result in a redistribution of income. Mr. McGovern discusses these items so mildly and casually that they do not seem radical. But make no doubt of it, in the deeper meaning of the word, they are. The question--perhaps the basic question of 1972--is whether a tide is running; whether the country has reached such a state of cynicism about things as they are, and the rules of an Establishment that it will take a bold step in a new direction. “Radical?” says McGovern disarmingly. “Let me say I come from the state of South Dakota where there are two-to-one Republican odds against me. I have been elected four times in that state. Ordinarily we from South Dakota.” Yes, he agrees mildly, the propos to cut the defense budget, to end the Vietnam war, toreduce the loopholes in the tax law and give the middle class and the poor: a better deal, “igrhile’ the ‘do’ represent a break with the past, I think that is what the American people want.” é Does a man with these notions have a chance of election against an entrenched White House incumbent: Who knows? With unemployment almost as high as ever, with prices still rising, with 25 percent of plant capacity unused, with a deep loathing for the war, Mr. Nixon may have difficulties. Another thing to remember is that nobody really loves Mr. Nixon a whole lot; people may admire him, and certainly the banking and business interests are going to give him the biggest campaign support ever if George McGovern gets the nod, but in terms of personal popularity whatever the opposite of charisma is, Mr. Nixon has tons of it. One thing more should be said. If George McGovern is nominated and elected this will be one of those rare critical” elections. They come at infrequent intervals, about 28 or 36 years apart, and one is long overdue -- the last was FDR in 1932. McGovern believes what he says and his views mark a new direction. If the public is in the mood to elect him #fimost certainly means a political realignment. bulldozers and scraped the land bare of trees and bushes at the rate of 1,000 acres a day or 44-million square feet a day until we had Rhode Island, 750,000 acres. Suppose we flew huge planes over the land and sprayed 100-million pounds of poisonous destroyed an area of prime forests the size of Massachusetts or 5% million acres. Suppose we flew B-52 bombers over the land dropping 500-pound bombs until we had dropped almost 3 pounds per person for every man, woman, and child on earth—8 billion pounds—and created 23 million craters on the land measuring 26 feet deep and 40 feet in diameter. Suppose the major objective of the bombing is not enemy troops but rather a vague and unsuccessful policy of harassment and territorial denial called pattern or carpet bombing. Suppose the land destruction involves 80 percent of the timber forests and 10 percent of all the cultivated land in the Nation. We would consider such a result a monu- done to our ally, South Vietnam. While under heavy pressure the military finally stopped the chemical defoliation war and has substituted another massive war against the land itself by a program of pattern or carpet bombing and massive land clearing with a huge machine called a Rome Plow. The huge areas destroyed pockmarked, scorched, and bulldozed resemble the moon and are no longer productive. I This is the documented story from on-the- spot studies and pictures done by two dis- tinguished scientists, Prof. E. W. Pfeiffer and Prof. Arthur H. Westing. These are the same two distinguished scientists who made the defoliation studies that alerted Congress and the country to the grave implications of our chemical warfare program in Vietnam, which has now been terminated . . . This is impersonal, automated, and mechanistic warfare brought to its logical conclusion—permanent, total destruction. The tragedy of it all is that no one knows or understands what is happening there, or why, or to what end. We have simply unleashed a gigantic machine which goes about its im- personal business destroying whatever is there without plan or purpose. The finger of responsibility points everywhere but nowhere in particular. Who designed this policy of war against the land, and why? Nobody seems to know and nobody rationally can defend it . .. . » If Congress knew and understood, we would not appropriate the money. If the President knew and understood, he would stop it in 30 minutes. If the people of America knew and under- stood, they would remove from office those responsible for it, if they could ever find out who is responsible . . . . The cold, hard, and cruel irony of it all is that South Vietnam would have been better off losing to Hanoi than winning with us. Now she faces the worst of all possible worlds with much of her land destroyed and her chances of independent survival after we leave in grave doubt at best. : This has been a hard speech to give and harder to write because I did not know hat to say or how to say it—and I still do no#’xaow.. But I do know that when the Members of doing there, neither they nor the people of this Nation will sleep well that night. scription, $6. per year. Call 675-5211 for subscripfions. Editor emeritus: Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks Editor: Doris R. Mallin News editor: Shawn Murphy Advertising: Carolyn Gass