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TIME MACHINE
1977 25 YEARS AGO
NO SUGAR TONIGHT
BY FREDERIC D. SCHWARZ
On March 9, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced its intention to ban saccharin, an artificial sweetener in use since the turn of the century, because of studies that showed it caused bladder cancer in rats. Dieters, diabetics, and producers of low-calorie foods and beverages reacted with outrage, and understandably so. Ever since 1969, when cyclamates were banned, also for causing cancer, saccharin had been the only artificial sweetener on the market.
Opponents of the ban pointed out that the rats that had developed cancer had been fed a diet of 5 percent saccharin, or the equivalent of 800 cans of diet soda per day, a level at which many common substances would no doubt cause problems. Canada, where the incriminating studies were performed, announced its intention to ban saccharin the same day. But cyclamates were still legal in that country, combining with Cuban cigars and over-the-counter codeine to make Canada a sybarite’s paradise.
FDA officials pointed out that they had no choice. Under the law, any food additive linked with cancer had to be banned. In April the agency backed off a bit, allowing saccharin to be sold in tablets or powder form but not in prepared foods or beverages. This was not enough to satisfy Congress, which passed an 18-month moratorium on the ban. The FDA finally settled for requiring warning labels in stores and on products containing the sweetener (this requirement was repealed by laws passed in 1996 and 2000). The congressional moratorium was repeatedly renewed, and during the 19805, as aspartame came onto the market and the Reagan administration adopted a laissez-faire approach, the saccharin ban ceased to be an issue. In July 2000, the National Institutes of Health removed saccharin from its list of suspected carcinogens.
The saccharin controversy turned out to be the high-water mark of the regulatory movement of the 1960s and 1970s. During the Eisenhower administration, the PDA’s responsibilities had been greatly expanded in an attempt to protect Americans from unwittingly consuming dangerous substances. Each success gave the regulators new momentum, and the culmination of this process, the saccharin ban, attempted to prevent willing purchasers from voluntarily consuming a product with at worst a marginal effect on health. Today, sensible regulators remember the saccharin controversy and make an effort to balance the costs and benefits of any proposed rule.
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25 YEARS AGO
March 1, 1977 To protect its fisheries, the United States declares that its territory extends 200 miles offshore, a limit that still holds today.
March 9-11, 1977 Gunmen from a Muslim sect occupy three government buildings in Washington, D.C., demanding, among other things, that seven prisoners convicted of killing the ringleader’s family be turned over to them. After 39 hours, the gunmen surrender.
50 YEARS AGO
March 3, 1952 The U.S. Supreme Court upholds a 1939 law that prohibits any member of an organization advocating the illegal overthrow of the government from teaching in public schools.
75 YEARS AGO
February 18, 1927 For the first time, the United States and Canada establish direct diplomatic relations independent of Great Britain.
March 7, 1927 The U.S. Supreme Court strikes down a Texas law prohibiting African-Americans from voting in primary elections.
100 YEARS AGO
March 10, 1902 President Theodore Roosevelt announces his administration’s first antitrust prosecution, against the Northern Securities Company, owned by J. P. Morgan.
125 YEARS AGO
March 3, 1877 The Desert Land Act offers 640-acre tracts in arid sections of the West at $1.25 per acre to buyers who agree to irrigate. The chief beneficiaries are cattle barons who hire sham applicants to stake claims and then sell them for a nominal fee.
150 YEARS AGO
March 20, 1852 Harriet Beecher Stowe’s extremely popular antislavery novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin, which had been serialized in a Washington newspaper, is published in book form.
200 YEARS AGO
March 16, 1802 Congress establishes the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.
35O YEARS AGO
March 12, 1652 The colony of Virginia abandons its loyalty to the beheaded King Charles I and submits to the authority of Parliament and Oliver Cromwell’s Commonwealth. On March 29, Maryland does the same.
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